Showing posts with label Avert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Avert. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2014

Congress Approves Bill to Avert Medicare Pay Cut for Doctors


The U.S. Senate gave final congressional approval on Monday to legislation to avert a pay cut for doctors who participate in the Medicare insurance program for the elderly and disabled.


By a vote of 64-35, the Democratic-led Senate sent the measure, approved last week by the Republican-led House of Representatives, to President Barack Obama to sign into law.


The bill would give doctors a one-year reprieve from a 24 percent cut set to kick in this week under the Medicare payment formula, known as the Sustainable Growth Rate, or SGR.


It marked the 17th time Congress had agreed to a temporary “doc fix” rather than agreeing to a permanent bipartisan replacement of the 1997 funding formula.


The payments affect doctors treating patients under Medicare, which pays for healthcare for nearly 51 million people in the United States who are 65 and older or disabled.


Republican and Democratic lawmakers approved the “doc fix,” knowing that failure to do so would risk prompting doctors to drop out of the program, leaving patients without care.


© 2014 Thomson/Reuters. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – America



Congress Approves Bill to Avert Medicare Pay Cut for Doctors

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Iraq needs Kurdish oil income to avert budget collapse -lawmaker

Iraq needs Kurdish oil income to avert budget collapse -lawmaker
http://pixel.quantserve.com/pixel/p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif





BAGHDAD Sun Jan 19, 2014 9:50am EST



BAGHDAD Jan 19 (Reuters) – Iraq cannot finance its projected 2014 budget deficit unless the northern Kurdistan region pays its oil export revenue into the national treasury – or loses its share of state spending, a senior lawmaker said on Sunday.


Haider al-Abadi, head of parliament’s treasury committee, told Reuters the budget, swollen by extra expenditure, would “collapse” if the state kept paying the autonomous region its 17 percent share even as the Kurds withhold oil export proceeds.


Baghdad’s chronic quarrel with Kurdistan over how to manage and share Iraq’s energy resources intensified this month when the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) said oil had begun flowing to Turkey for export via a pipeline outside federal control.


Last week Iraq’s oil minister threatened legal action and drastic trade reprisals against Turkey and any foreign companies involved in what he called the “smuggling” of Iraqi oil.


Kurdistan’s Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani arrived in the Iraqi capital on Sunday to pursue talks on an issue that has bedevilled relations between Iraq’s Arabs and minority Kurds.


“We go to Baghdad with the intention of closing gaps,” KRG spokesman Safeen Dizayee said before the talks, which he said would focus on increasing Kurdistan’s oil output and a mechanism for marketing its exports.


Abadi said the draft budget projected a deficit of about 21 trillion Iraqi dinars ($ 18 billion), assuming the Kurds paid the treasury the revenue from budgeted oil exports of 400,000 barrels per day – a target industry sources say far exceeds Kurdistan’s current export capacity of around 255,000 bpd.


To Baghdad’s fury, the Kurds handed over no oil export revenue last year because of an unresolved dispute over the payment of oil companies operating in the northern region.


For much of 2013 the Kurds were trucking what industry sources estimated was up to 60,000 bpd of crude and condensates to Turkey, while the independent pipeline was being completed.


In 2012, the Kurds exported 61,000 bpd of crude via the Baghdad-controlled pipeline to Turkey, so the revenue went automatically to the central government.


Baghdad complained at the time that the Kurds should have exported more than double this amount, however.


BUDGET CRUNCH


Abadi said state spending had risen sharply in the draft budget due to increases in pensions and the minimum public sector wage, child benefits and student allowances.


Echoing remarks made in the past week by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and Oil Minister Abdul Kareem Luaibi, Abadi said the central government would have to cut the Kurds’ budget share.


“They are not contributing, so why should they get something out of it?” he asked in an interview. “At the moment we have a deficit of 21 trillion. If you add 15 to 16 trillion to it, the budget will collapse,” he said, estimating the additional shortfall if no Kurdish oil revenue is handed over.


Abadi, who is also a senior member of Maliki’s Shi’ite Islamist Dawa party, said time was running out for the budget to be passed before parliament is dissolved ahead of an election on April 30. He said it would be hard to muster a quorum of 163 of the assembly’s 325 members during an electoral campaign.


Kurdish and Sunni Muslim opposition lawmakers would stay away, as would MPs busy campaigning or those without a motive to turn up because they were not running for re-election, he said.


Abadi accused the Kurds of seeking to prolong oil talks until after the poll to entrench a fait accompli whereby they pocket their own revenue from oil “officially” piped to Turkey and still receive their 17 percent share of the federal budget.


Kurdish officials say that in practice Kurdistan receives closer to 10 percent of the national budget.


Even if the Kurds paid over notional oil revenues of 17 or 18 trillion dinars from exports of 400,000 bpd, Abadi said, Baghdad would only just be able to bridge its 2014 budget gap.


He said the withholding of Kurdistan’s earnings also violated a U.N. Security Council resolution under which all Iraqi oil export proceeds must be paid into a U.N.-approved account in New York from which five percent must be deducted to pay war reparations to Kuwait for Iraq’s 1990 invasion.






Reuters: Bonds News




Read more about Iraq needs Kurdish oil income to avert budget collapse -lawmaker and other interesting subjects concerning Bonds at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, October 10, 2013

FTSE LIVE: Shares rally on hopes of US deal to avert a debt default


By This Is Money Reporters


|


15:45: The Footsie remains in positive territory this afternoon spurred on by a rally on Wall Street which has raced ahead by 200 points in its first hour of trading as hope of a possible resolution to the US government shutdown.


The Dow Jones Industrial Average is now 206 points, or 1.4 per cent, higher at 15,009. Meanwhile the US dollar rose to a two-week high against a basket of major currencies.


Treasury prices have slipped, sending yields higher, as signs of progress in Washington buoyed risk appetite. The benchmark 10-year note rose 4.5 basis points to 2.709 per cent.




US crisis: Democrats want a no-strings budget resolution and debt ceiling hike passed before they negotiate with Republicans led by John Boehner


US crisis: Democrats want a no-strings budget resolution and debt ceiling hike passed before they negotiate with Republicans led by John Boehner, pictured right


US crisis: Democrats want a no-strings budget resolution and debt ceiling hike passed before they negotiate with Republicans led by John Boehner, pictured right




In London the FTSE 100 Index has pushed higher by 0.5 per cent in the last hour as investors took heart from the rally across the Atlantic taking it 1.4 per cent higher on the day to 6,426.


 


Overnight a Republican leadership aide, U.S. House of Representatives Republicans are considering agreeing to a short-term increase in the government’s borrowing authority, keeping a possible default after October 17 at bay and buying time for negotiations on broader policy measures.


Markets have also been lifted by the nomination of Janet Yellen by US president Barack Obama to the post of Federal Reserve chair. Believed to be a fiscal policy dove, Ms Yellen is seen likely to postpone any tapering of the central bank’s massive monthly asset purchase programme until at least the start of next year.


14:35: Shares in London are just shy of 1 per cent higher in afternoon trading as hope of a resolution to the political deadlock over budget negotiations in the US were raised overnight.


The FTSE 100 Index is 0.97 per cent higher at 6,399 while in the US the Dow Jones Industrial Average opened just a few moments ago sharply higher also up 1 per cent at 14,947.16.


According to a Republican leadership aide, U.S. House of Representatives Republicans are considering agreeing to a short-term increase in the government’s borrowing authority, keeping a possible default after October 17 at bay and buying time for negotiations on broader policy measures.


President Barack Obama and congressional leaders are set to meet on Thursday for further discussions.


‘There is one major ‘if’ attached to the President’s potential olive branch, and that is reopening the government, something that still looks very unlikely in the interim as the partisan politics from both sides continues to rage,’ Evan Lucas, an analyst at IG, said in a morning note.


Markets have also been lifted by the nomination of Janet Yellen by US president Barack Obama to the post of Federal Reserve chair. Believed to be a fiscal policy dove, Ms Yellen is seen likely to postpone any tapering of the central bank’s massive monthly asset purchase programme until at least the start of next year.


12.15: The FTSE 100 has extended morning gains to move 66.5 points higher to 6,404.4.


‘Reassurances from the US that short-term measures will be instigated to avert the upcoming debt-ceiling deadline have given European equity markets a jolt upwards, helping to stem some of the risk aversion of the past few days,’ said Brenda Kelly of IG.


‘News that Hong Kong has raised collateral haircuts [increased its buffers against risk] on US treasury bills appears to be something of a warning shot to US politicians.


‘The implications are that US treasury bonds are considered broadly more risky and the Hong Kong exchange is clearly preparing for the worst case scenario – a US default. The more likely explanation is that Hong Kong is simply telling the US to get its act together.’


10.50:


The FTSE 100 has rallied 47.7 points to 6,385.6 on hopes that US politicians will cobble together some kind of deal to avoid a debt default, if only for a short while before they inevitably resume hostilities.


In London, SSE shares rose 22.5p to 1476.5p after the energy firm said it was increasing average bills by 8.2 per cent from November, while British Gas rival Centrica was 5.25p higher at 366.05p on expectations it will follow suit.


Charles Church housebuilder Persimmon was again prominent on the FTSE 100 risers board amid expectations that it will reap the benefit of the Government’s Help to Buy housing scheme. Shares rose 24.5p to 1155.5p, having climbed by 5 per cent yesterday.


Shares in retail chain WH Smith jumped 8 per cent or 66p to 901p in the FTSE 250 after it posted a 6 per cent rise in full-year profits to £108million and said it would return another £50million to shareholders.


And Ladbrokes was 6 per cent higher, up 10.9p to 190.7p, as fresh takeover talk was ignited by the mystery purchase of a near 3 per cent stake in the struggling firm.


Monex Capital said of the latest developments in Washington: ‘Lawmakers in Washington do seem now to be accepting just how big the fall-out would be for both the US and the global economy in the event of the debt ceiling being breached.


‘As such there have been murmurings that a short-term increase in the borrowing limit may be on the table, although with a week to run until doomsday, there will doubtless be further political grandstanding to be seen.


‘Regardless, both the dollar and equities across the globe are finding support off this news.’


Matt Basi of CMC Markets said: ‘Any evidence of politicians coming back to the negotiating table was always going to be met with some kind of relief rally, so today’s move will not be a huge surprise to the market majority, but reading between the lines it would seem that this optimism could still be short lived.


‘Firstly, while Republicans seem to be readying something to take to the President, reports still suggest that the proposal would have “attachments”, and Obama has continuously stated that there will be no concessions from the ruling house, so this would indicate someone has to swallow what is left of their pride and give in.


‘It seems from reports that the Republicans have given up on their attack on Obamacare to move to pastures new, perhaps giving room for the two sides to meet somewhere in the middle on other issues. 


‘The other thing to note is that anything passed looks to at best stall, only to endure it all again in the near future. So yet again it appears the job of the US politician is simply to apply a strong foot to that poor old can on a never ending road, rather than to find a cure. So for the markets…relief yes, solution no.’


8.35:


The FTSE 100 has opened up 22.5 points at 6,360.4 amid signs of progress to end the US budget stand-off and prevent a possible debt default.


US Republicans are considering a short-term hike in the government’s borrowing authority to buy time for talks on broader policy issues, a party leadership aide said.


President Barack Obama has said he would accept a short-term ceiling debt increase as long as no strings were attached. House Republican leaders will visit the White House today as the search intensifies for a way to break the impasse.


But Capital Spreads commented: ‘This meeting already looks like a non starter. Although a positive start is expected today, traders should be wary about the meeting resembling a boxing match weigh-in and knocking any optimism about the political stalemate out for the count.’


Wall Street and Asian markets rose overnight. However, the FTSE 100 closed down 27.92 points at 6,337.91 yesterday, its lowest closing level since ending at 6,229.87 on July 3.


Investors will keep an eye on today’s meeting of the Bank of England, although it is expected to leave interest rates unchanged despite more signs of economic strength – sticking to its commitment of a freeze at 0.5 per cent while joblessness stays above target.


Stocks to watch today include:


BARCLAYS: Senior investment banker John Miller was appointed to the newly created position of head of banking for the Americas, according to an internal memo seen by Reuters.


ROYAL DUTCH SHELL: Shell Nigeria said it had shut down its Trans Niger Pipeline owing to reports of leaks, deferring 150,000 barrels per day of crude oil just 10 days after the pipeline was re-opened.


GKN: Informa’s Adam Walker will join the GKN board next January as group finance director, succeeding William Seeger who intends to step down from the board on 25 February.


MELROSE: The corporate turnaround specialist agreed to sell Crosby and Acco to KKR for $ 1billion.


BAE SYSTEMS: The defence contractor said its earnings could be hit by 6-7 pence per share should it fail to reach agreement on a jet deal with Saudi Arabia this year.


SSE: The energy supplier said it would raise its household charges for electricity and gas by an average of 8.2 per cent next month.


ASHMORE: The asset manager reported total assets under management for the first-quarter were estimated at $ 78.5billion, up 1.4 per cent in the previous quarter and in line with management’s expectations.


HAYS: The recruiter reported net fees were up 2 per cent on an organic basis.


WH SMITH: The retailer said annual profit rose 6 per cent to £108million and its total dividend was up 14 per cent to 30.7 pence per share. It announced plans to buy back an additional £50million worth of shares.


AIR PARTNER: The aviation company reported full-year profit up 31 per cent on revenue down 3 percent to £220.6million. It said trading prospects for the six months to 31 January 2014 were currently in line with expectations.


SYNERGY HEALTH: The specialist servicer to healthcare providers said trading was in line with its expectations.







Money | Mail Online



FTSE LIVE: Shares rally on hopes of US deal to avert a debt default

Monday, September 30, 2013

Blame game rife as Dems, GOP try to avert shutdown








Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., right, holds up a passage from the Affordable Care Act concerning health care benefits for women as she tell reporters that House Republicans’ fight against it is tantamount to a war against women, Monday, Sept. 30, 2013, during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. The Senate has the next move on must-do legislation required to keep the government open, and the Democratic-led chamber is expected to reject the latest effort from House Republicans to use a normally routine measure to attack President Barack Obama’s signature health care law. Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich, listens at left. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., right, holds up a passage from the Affordable Care Act concerning health care benefits for women as she tell reporters that House Republicans’ fight against it is tantamount to a war against women, Monday, Sept. 30, 2013, during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. The Senate has the next move on must-do legislation required to keep the government open, and the Democratic-led chamber is expected to reject the latest effort from House Republicans to use a normally routine measure to attack President Barack Obama’s signature health care law. Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich, listens at left. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas talks during a TV interview about the impasse over federal funding and the Affordable Care Act, Monday, Sept. 30, 2013, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Hours before a threatened government shutdown, the Senate has the next move Monday on must-do budget legislation that has fueled a bitter congressional dispute over President Barack Obama’s signature health care law. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas talks during a TV interview about the impasse over federal funding and the Affordable Care Act, Monday, Sept. 30, 2013, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Hours before a threatened government shutdown, the Senate has the next move Monday on must-do budget legislation that has fueled a bitter congressional dispute over President Barack Obama’s signature health care law. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., speaks during a news conference at 30th Street Station in Philadelphia, Monday, Sept. 30, 2013, as the government teeters on the brink of a partial shutdown beginning at midnight unless Congress can reach an agreement on funding. A conservative challenge to President Barack Obama’s health care law threatens to push the federal government to the brink of a partial shutdown Monday, with the Senate expected to convene just hours before a deadline to pass a temporary spending bill. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)













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(AP) — Compromise elusive, Republicans and Democrats engaged in finger-pointing Monday just hours before the first government shutdown in 17 years, driven by an intractable budget dispute over President Barack Obama’s signature health care law.


House Republicans blamed Senate Democrats for taking the weekend off and resisting a House measure that would avert a shutdown — but only by delaying further implementation of the health care law for a year and eliminating a tax on medical devices.


“The Senate decided not to work yesterday,” Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said shortly after the House began its session — and just hours before a threatened shutdown at midnight. “Well my goodness, if there’s such an emergency, where are they?”


The Senate returns shortly after 2 p.m. EDT — just 10 hours before a threatened shutdown — and Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and his Democrats have made it clear that they want the House to vote on their straightforward bill to keep the government open. Reid plans votes to reject GOP-crafted amendments to delay the 3-year-old health care law and eliminate a tax on medical devices, and he has the numbers to prevail.


If no compromise can be reached by midnight, Americans would soon see the impact: National parks would close. Many low-to-moderate incomes borrowers and first-time homebuyers seeking government-backed mortgages could face delays. Passport applications would be delayed.


One program that will begin on Tuesday — even with a shutdown — is enrollment in new health care exchanges for millions of Americans — a crucial part of Obama’s health care law. That’s because most of the program is paid from monies not subject to congressional appropriations.


But about 800,000 federal workers, many already reeling from the effect of the automatic budget cuts, would be forced off the job without pay. Some critical services such as patrolling the borders, inspecting meat and controlling air traffic would continue. Social Security benefits would be sent, and the Medicare and Medicaid health care programs for the elderly and poor would continue to pay doctors and hospitals.


Tea party and conservative Republicans have forced Boehner and the House GOP leadership to couple the spending bill with efforts to dismantle the health care law. Democrats reject putting conditions on the temporary spending bill, saying that’s akin to political ransom.


“I could sit here and say, ‘Well, I’m not going to vote for a budget unless you agree to pass gun safety legislation.’ That’s not the way this place is supposed to operate,” said Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J.


Two moderate Republicans from Democratic-leaning states — Sen. Susan Collins of Maine and Rep. Charles Dent of Pennsylvania — signaled that they could back a straightforward spending bill.


“I would be supportive of it and I believe the votes are there in the House to pass it at that point,” Dent said.


“We’re not going to shut down the government,” Rep. Pete Sessions of Texas, a member of the House GOP leadership told reporters as he left a closed-door meeting of GOP leaders.


Since the last government shutdown 17 years ago, temporary funding bills known as continuing resolutions have been noncontroversial, with neither party willing to chance a shutdown to achieve legislative goals it couldn’t otherwise win.


“You’re going to shut down the government if you can’t prevent millions of Americans from getting affordable care,” said Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md.


A leader of the tea party Republicans, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, insisted the blame rests with Senate Democrats.


“The House has twice now voted to keep the government open. And if we have a shutdown, it will only be because when the Senate comes back, (Senate Majority Leader) Harry Reid says, ‘I refuse even to talk,’” said Cruz, who led a 21-hour broadside against allowing the temporary funding bill to advance if stripped clean of a tea party-backed provision to derail Obamacare. The effort failed.


The battle started with a House vote to pass the short-term funding bill with a provision that would have eliminated the federal dollars needed to put Obama’s health care overhaul into place. The Senate voted along party lines to strip that out and sent the measure back to the House.


The latest House bill, passed early Sunday by a near party-line vote of 231-192, sent back to the Senate two major changes: a one-year delay of key provisions of the health insurance law and repeal of a new tax on medical devices that partially funds it. The steps still go too far for the White House and its Democratic allies.


A House GOP leader, Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, said Sunday that the House “will have a few other options” for the Senate to consider, though he did not specify them. “The House will get back together in enough time, send another provision not to shut the government down, but to fund it,” he said.


He suggested that House Republicans would try blocking a mandate that individuals buy health insurance or face a tax penalty, saying there might be some Democratic support in the Senate for that.


On the other hand, Democrats said the GOP’s bravado may fade as the deadline to avert a shutdown nears.


Asked whether he could vote for a “clean” temporary funding bill, Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho, said he couldn’t. But he added, “I think there’s enough people in the Republican Party who are willing to do that. And I think that’s what you’re going to see.”


House Republicans argued that they had already made compromises; for instance, their latest measure would leave intact most parts of the health care law that have taken effect, including requiring insurance companies to cover people with pre-existing conditions and to let families’ plans cover children up to age 26. They also would allow insurers to deny contraception coverage based on religious or moral objections.


___


Associated Press writers Alan Fram and Donna Cassata in Washington and Marc Levy in Harrisburg, Pa., contributed to their report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Blame game rife as Dems, GOP try to avert shutdown

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Efforts to avert U.S. shutdown continue amid Republican discord


The U.S. Capitol is seen against a clear blue sky in Washington May 20, 2013. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

The U.S. Capitol is seen against a clear blue sky in Washington May 20, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque






WASHINGTON | Tue Sep 24, 2013 9:21am EDT



WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A trio of Tea Party-backed U.S. senators threatening to stall a bill to fund the U.S. government ran into a wall of resistance Monday from top Senate Republicans, including Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.


In statements issued Monday evening, McConnell and the second-ranking Republican, John Cornyn of Texas, made it clear that they would not support the tactics of freshman Senators Ted Cruz, Mike Lee and Marco Rubio, which would have increased the odds of a government shutdown on Oct 1.


The move, while highlighting growing rifts among Republicans, did not eliminate the possibility of a shutdown, however. Indeed, all signs on Monday still pointed to a frantic last-minute showdown that will determine whether or not the U.S. government stays open next week as a result of Republican efforts to scuttle “Obamacare,” President Barack Obama’s health care law.


Heightening the tension, and the pressure on Republicans, the Pentagon issued a warning about the consequences of a shutdown, neither the first nor the last such announcement expected from federal agencies over the next few days.


Congressional authorization for the government to spend money runs out at the end of the fiscal year on September 30, unless Congress passes a “continuing resolution” (CR) to keep the government running.


On Friday, Republicans in the House of Representatives passed and sent to the Senate a measure that would make continued funding of the government contingent on defunding Obamacare, which is designed to provide insurance coverage to millions of uninsured Americans.


The bill passed on a mostly partisan vote of 230-189.


The Democratic-controlled Senate is likely to strip out the Obamacare provision and send the funding bill back to the House, but it’s taking its time.


It could be as late as Sunday evening before it acts, giving the House less than 24 hours to sort out its many divisions and respond.


“Either pass a clean CR or shut down the federal government,” would be the Senate’s message to the House, Majority Leader Harry Reid said on Monday.


Any bill that defunds Obamacare “is dead on arrival in the Senate … We’re not going to bow to Tea Party anarchists,” Reid said, referring to the most ardent Obamacare opponents, who are increasingly influential in the Republican House.


A threat to use the tactic of a filibuster by Cruz, Rubio and Lee – while unlikely to have permanently thwarted Reid and his Democrats – would have at least slowed things down even more, particularly if backed by other Republicans.


It takes 60 votes in the hundred-member Senate to end a filibuster. With Democrats controlling only 54 votes, they will need at least six Republicans to move the measure back to the House.


Statements by McConnell and Cornyn strongly suggested that those Republican votes would indeed be available. Cruz and Rubio are both potential presidential contenders in 2016. Cruz in particular has angered fellow Republicans by going out on his own around the country to pressure them into not “surrendering” on Obamacare.


Ironically, a successful filibuster by Tea Party supporters would have blocked consideration of the bill to defund Obamacare, supported by the smaller-government Tea Party and passed with a round of cheers by House conservatives.


The Defense Department said on Monday it had been directed by the White House budget office to begin planning for a shutdown, an action it said would “put severe hardships on an already stressed workforce and is totally unnecessary.”


All military personnel would continue working regardless of the shutdown, Pentagon spokesman George Little said, but they might not be paid on time, depending on how long it lasted.


The government does not totally close down in such situations. There are many exceptions, including national security, emergency services, payments of Medicare health insurance and Social Security retirement benefits.


PUBLIC OUTCRY


If Congress fails to meet its deadline, a shutdown could last a few hours or a few days but probably not longer, as it would inevitably be accompanied by a public outcry that has often in the past forced Congress’s hand.


A CNBC poll released on Monday showed that by a 59-19 percent margin respondents opposed linking defunding of Obamacare to a possible shutdown, or to a failure to raise the government’s borrowing authority, which is also expected to provoke a showdown by mid-October or early November.


Eighteen percent were undecided, according to the nationwide poll of 800 people conducted by Hart-McInturff. It had a margin of error of 3.4 percentage points.


The House includes 200 Democrats and 233 Republicans. A combined vote of roughly two dozen Republicans and almost all Democrats is thought to be the most likely route to avoiding a shutdown or to undoing one once it gets started.


The long Republican war against Obamacare is at the heart of the clashes ahead, just as important provisions of that law start taking effect on October 1.


The only certainty is that when the dust settles, Obamacare will still be standing. The law was upheld by the Supreme Court last year.


House Republicans next week hope to unveil a second important bill – one to prevent the U.S. government from defaulting on its debt sometime in October or November.


The legislation would raise the country’s $ 16.7 trillion borrowing limit. Republicans again want to extract something from Democrats in return for the debt limit hike.


They have been talking about attaching yet another plan to the debt limit bill that would gut or delay portions of Obamacare, as well as forcing approval of the Keystone oil pipeline that would run from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico.


House Republicans say they also are looking at some tax provisions to possibly add onto the debt limit bill.


Obama has warned Republicans against loading up the debt limit bill with unrelated items, saying he will not negotiate on a measure that in effect pays the government’s outstanding bills.


Passage of a loaded-up debt limit bill in the House likely would trigger a rerun of the stop-gap spending fight that is consuming Washington now.


The battle over the shutdown and the debt ceiling is to some extent a repeat of fiscal showdowns that have taken up much of the past three years, since Republicans took control of the House in the 2010 elections.


With every one of them, the standing of Congress among Americans, never very high, has sunk even lower.


(Reporting By Richard Cowan and David Alexander; Editing by Fred Barbash, Xavier Briand, Jim Loney and Tim Dobbyn)


(This Sept. 23 story was refiled to correct the spelling of Cruz throughout)






Reuters: Politics



Efforts to avert U.S. shutdown continue amid Republican discord

Saturday, March 23, 2013

In Congress, few flipping on gay marriage, Senate staffers "hottest," War over "balanced," Senate votes to avert shutdown, Ethics questions about Harkin Institute, McCaskill writing Akin book



ON CAPITOL HILL, FEW CHANGE COURSE ON GAY MARRIAGE – Manu Raju writes for the hometown paper: “Support for gay marriage is picking up steam all over the country — except on Capitol Hill. Take Sen. Saxby Chambliss. When asked if his views had changed on gay marriage, the Georgia Republican quipped: ‘I’m not gay. So I’m not going to marry one.’ In interviews this week with POLITICO, most Republican lawmakers and some conservative Democrats still voiced opposition to gay marriage, despite the dramatic swing in public opinion supporting it. While they have certainly muted their rhetoric since 2004 — when Republicans campaigned on the promise to outlaw gay marriage — lawmakers who remain opposed to the issue could jeopardize any legislative response if the Supreme Court rules against same-sex marriage in a pair of high-profile cases. The cases will be argued next week.


– “The disconnect between inside-and-outside-the-Beltway attitudes comes at a thorny time, especially for Republicans. The party is trying to broaden its appeal to younger Americans — who support gay marriage in large numbers — as well as scores of new voting blocs. Some establishment figures have changed course, with Rob Portman last week becoming the first sitting GOP senator to endorse gay marriage, after learning that his son is gay. And the Republican National Committee, in a bluntly worded report detailing the GOP’s political woes, called for the party to become more sensitive on the issue of gay rights.


–“But many lawmakers are changing their legislative tactics and toning down their public rhetoric — rather than undergoing a sea change in their stances. ‘I’m still not supportive of it,’ said Sen. Mark Pryor (D-Ark.), who is up for reelection in 2014, adding he still backs the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act that the Supreme Court is reviewing. I’m with South Carolina,’ said GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham, who also faces voters next year. ‘I believe in traditional marriage — between a man and a woman, without animosity. I don’t mind if people are able to transfer their property, visit their loved ones in hospitals, but marriage to me, I’ve stayed with the concept of traditional marriage.’” http://politi.co/Y9u26Q


– Rob Portman and Hillary Clinton’s endorsement of gay marriage this month were profiles in caution and political calculation rather than courage, write POLITICO’s Maggie Haberman, Alex Burns and John Harris. http://politi.co/Y9tApo


DATING APP: SENATE STAFFERS ‘HOTTEST’ ON THE HILL – POLITICO’s Katie Glueck flags this report of the 12 most attractive workplaces in D.C.: “Looking for a hot date? Try the U.S. Senate. According to a report released Wednesday from the D.C.-based dating app Hinge, the Senate has the second-best-looking workforce in Washington, coming in only behind the people working at Vida Fitness, a gym chain. House of Representatives employees, however, didn’t fare as well: according to the app, Hinge, the House clocks in as no. 11 on the list.” http://politi.co/ZUB6ie See who else made the cut: http://bit.ly/YHP1Hs


MARKEY’S NEW CAMPAIGN AD HIGHLIGHTS FIGHT AGAINST BP – Ed Markey’s Senate campaign is continuing to tout his record on holding oil company executives accountable for the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and his efforts to protect the environment. “Eleven dead. Communities ruined. The worst environmental disaster in American history,” a narrator intones. “When BP tried to avoid responsibility, one man said no.” Watch the ad here: http://youtu.be/2362jWi5sj0


–Meanwhile, in the GOP primary, former Navy SEAL and private equity investor Gabriel Gomez will announce today he’s raised $ 350,000 in the past five weeks, Shira Schoenberg writes for MassLive.com. He’s facing fellow Republicans, state Rep. Daniel Winslow of Norfolk and former U.S. Attorney Michael Sullivan. http://bit.ly/WMoo8I


WAR OF WORD – Jonathan Allen writes for the hometown paper: “Washington’s budget writers are waging war over a single word: ‘balanced.’ House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) calls his new fiscal blueprint a ‘balanced plan.’ Senate Budget Committee Chairwoman Patty Murray (D-Wash.) said Wednesday that her version is a ‘truly balanced approach.’ Republicans are touting internal polling that suggests Ryan’s balanced budget will play well in competitive districts. But Democrats are confident that their approach will prove more popular because it was road-tested by President Barack Obama when he won re-election last fall. It’s hardly a new fight, but action on the House and Senate budgets this week has raised the stakes over whose version of balance is the right course for the nation.” http://politi.co/ZUrTGt


– Meanwhile, Speaker Boehner said at a GOP fundraiser Wednesday night that Obama’s “on the ropes” as House Republicans put forth a balanced budget far better than his own, POLITICO’s Jake Sherman writes. http://politi.co/ZUSe7j


HOUSE TO PASS PAUL RYAN BUDGET – Molly Hooper and Russell Berman write for The Hill: “Republican leaders are poised to pass Rep. Paul Ryan’s (R-Wis.) budget on Thursday, having convinced centrists and conservatives to back the blueprint that Democrats believe is their road map back to the House majority. As of late Wednesday, only three Republicans had publicly said they intend to vote against the Ryan plan, while 33 House GOP lawmakers were undecided or declined to comment, according to a whip count conducted by The Hill. Among the undecided lawmakers, several noted they would probably support the measure. With all Democrats expected to vote ‘no,’ House Republicans can only afford about 15 defections. Last year, 10 Republicans rejected Ryan’s budget; the House GOP majority is smaller in 2013.” http://bit.ly/10mqPyW


– On Wednesday, House GOP leaders beat back a budget by conservatives that called for deeper cuts than Ryan’s blueprint, POLITICO’s Jonathan Allen reports. “Typically, Republicans can rely on Democrats to vote no on conservative amendments, which allows some middle-of-the-conference Republicans to vote ‘yes’ on conservative proposals without the fear they will pass. But on Wednesday, most House Democrats cast ‘present’ votes. That meant that only Republicans would decide whether the RSC budget would replace the Ryan plan. … While the outcome was never seriously in doubt, the Democratic procedural maneuver ensured Republicans didn’t get to cast a freebie vote for a budget that plays well with the conservative base but is considered too extreme even by most members of the GOP.” http://politi.co/WEvris


FIRST LOOK: SENATE GOP LAUNCHES WASTEFUL SPENDING SITE – As the Senate kicks off its budget debate, GOP Conference Vice Chairman Roy Blunt and his Republican colleagues are launching an online, one-stop-shop for Americans to learn more about wasteful government spending: bit.ly/CutWastefulSpending. In addition to videos, articles, and other resources, the site showcases the efforts led by Sen. Tom Coburn (#SequesterThis), Sen. Mike Lee (#CutThisNotThat), and House Republicans (#CutWaste) online.


THE RUBIO-AND-RAND PARTY – Our own Jim VandeHei and Mike Allen write in their latest “Behind the Curtain” column that Marco Rubio and Rand Paul are dominating: “Want to know if Republicans finally back immigration reform, stand a chance of picking up Senate seats in the midterms, or get their act together by 2016? Instead of the GOP, watch the Rubio-Paul Party. Forget John Boehner. Ignore Karl Rove. The real action in the GOP is coming from the newest wing of the party, the one born in the spring of 2009 – the offspring of Tea Party activists that almost single-handedly propelled Republicans to control of the House. This new movement brought Marco Rubio and Rand Paul to Washington – and made them the two most potent forces in GOP politics today. It also brought Chris Christie to New Jersey and Scott Walker to Wisconsin – and made them two of the most potent forces for 2016.


– “Right now, it’s Rubio and Paul dominating the show. This wing of the party has its own version of the Republican National Committee: the Heritage Foundation, now run by former South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint, a godfather of the new crusade; the aggressive, wealthy Koch brothers; and the Club for Growth, which chafes the Washington establishment by backing firebrands in GOP primaries (including one Marco Rubio).” http://politi.co/ZUPG9o


– The NYT’s Jonathan Weisman writes that Rubio and Paul, potential 2016ers, “are flying in each other’s airspace, not quite rivals but obvious competitors, thumping into each other in the narrow confines of the political world.” http://nyti.ms/ZNsgEn


ETHICS QUESTIONS SWIRL AROUND HARKIN INSTITUTE – Alicia Mundy writes for the Wall Street Journal: “Like many of his peers, Sen. Tom Harkin wanted to leave as a legacy a university center bearing his name. Today, that effort is in shambles and is raising questions about fundraising under congressional ethics rules. After a clash over the Iowa State University center’s academic mission and lackluster donations, Mr. Harkin said in February he wouldn’t donate his papers to the Harkin Institute of Public Policy and has moved to dissociate himself from it. The university, the Iowa Democrat’s alma mater, says it will soon decide whether to terminate the institute, which was formed less than two years ago. In October, the senator met with campus officials to discuss the direction of the institute and fundraising. Hours afterward, the university received a list of prospective donors to the institute from Mr. Harkin’s campaign attorney, according to university records obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request. The list included Harkin campaign donors and a number of companies that have sought and won assistance from the senator, according to the university records.


–“ Two suggested contacts, AmerUS Group Co. and American Equity Investment Life Holding Co., were among the firms that successfully pushed Mr. Harkin for an amendment to the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial-rules bill that kept certain insurance companies under state regulation, rather than more-stringent federal oversight. … The university said it didn’t approach suggested donors in the end, given uncertainty about the institute’s future. Mr. Harkin, 73 years old, has repeatedly denied soliciting donations for the center. His spokeswoman, Kate Cyrul Frischmann, said he ‘was and remains unaware of the names on the third-party list of prospective donors.’” http://on.wsj.com/WG1EWJ


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GOOD THURSDAY MORNING, MARCH 21, 2013, and welcome to The Huddle, your play-by-play preview of the day’s congressional news. Send tips, suggestions, comments, complaints and corrections to swong@politico.com. If you don’t already, please follow me on Twitter @scottwongDC.


My new followers include @HowardMortman and @katieniederee.


TODAY IN CONGRESS – The Senate is in at 9 a.m. and will continue consideration of the 2014 Democratic budget resolution. The House also meets at 9 a.m. with last votes expected no later than 3 p.m. on Paul Ryan’s 2014 budget and the Senate-passed stopgap measure to keep the government funded for another six months.


AROUND THE HILL – Rep. Phil Roe and the Doctors Caucus speak on the 3rd anniversary of Obamacare at 9:30 a.m. at the House Triangle. House Democratic Caucus Chairman Xavier Becerra, and Reps. Ron Kind, Terri Sewell, Dina Titus hold a conference call on the Affordable Care Act at 11 a.m. Dial: 1-800-593-9994. Password: ACA.


Rep. Tim Walz joins Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America in drawing attention to the VA backlog at the House Triangle. Rain location: Cannon 340. Speaker John Boehner holds an on-camera briefing with reporters at 11:15 a.m. in HVC Studio A. Sens. Debbie Stabenow, Barbara Boxer and Tammy Baldwin speak on the 2014 Democratic budget at 11:30 a.m. in the Senate Studio. House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi holds a news conference at noon in HVC Studio A. Also at noon, the Cato Institute hosts a forum on the economic benefits of immigration, with representatives from the Reason Foundation, National Foundation for American Policy and Kauffman Foundation, in Russell 485.


Sen. Marco Rubio delivers remarks at the 5th annual Telecom Policy Conference at 1 p.m. at the National Association of Home Builders, 1201 15th St., NW. Rubio will discuss his ideas for how to complete the transition to a digital world, including the need to reform outdated laws and how spectrum can help provide economic mobility for millions of Americans. He will also discuss why this matters to consumers, job creators, and entrepreneurs, and its impacts on middle class prosperity.


Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers and others speak on the Common Sense Nutrition Act at 1:45 p.m. in the House Triangle. At 8:30 a.m. Friday, Rep. Chris Van Hollen will be the guest speaker at Third Way’s Inside Politics breakfast.


SENATE VOTES TO AVERT SHUTDOWN, SENDS CR TO HOUSE – “A far-reaching six-month funding bill cleared the Senate on Wednesday afternoon after final adjustments were made for the meat industry to forestall the planned furloughs of food safety inspectors this summer in the wake of sequestration,” David Rogers writes for POLITICO. “The measure goes next to the House, which is expected to give its quick approval Thursday so as to avoid any threat of a government shutdown when the current continuing resolution runs out March 27. The final 73-26 Senate roll call followed a 63-36 vote in which 10 Republicans — nine of them from the Senate Appropriations Committee — again provided pivotal support. And the eight days of floor debate signaled a renewal of that bipartisan partnership that has been historically important in moving legislation through the Senate. …


–“The House took the first steps in its own version of the CR earlier this month, but the Senate went much further, covering the departments of Defense, Veterans Affairs, Justice, Commerce, Agriculture and Homeland Security, as well as the Food and Drug Administration, National Science Foundation and NASA.” http://politi.co/13cj1nj


HICKENLOOPER SIGNS GUN BILLS, STATES TAKING ACTION – Ivan Moreno writes for the AP: “Colorado’s governor signed bills Wednesday that place new restrictions on firearms, signaling a change for Democrats who have traditionally shied away from gun control in a state with a pioneer tradition of gun ownership and self-reliance. The legislation thrust Colorado into the national spotlight as a potential test of how far the country might be willing to go with new gun restrictions after the horror of mass killings at an Aurora movie theater and a Connecticut elementary school. Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper signed bills that require background checks for private and online gun sales and ban ammunition magazines that hold more than 15 rounds. … Republicans warned that voters would make Democrats pay. The bills failed to garner a single Republican vote.


–“The bills’ approval came exactly eight months after dozens of people were shot in Aurora, and a day after the executive director of the state Corrections Department, Tom Clements, was shot and killed at his home. Hickenlooper signed the legislation right after speaking with reporters about Clements’ slaying.” http://bit.ly/WWIKgx


OBAMACARE HITS HOME ON HILL – Jennifer Haberkorn writes for POLITICO: “Capitol Hill is about to get up close and personal with Obamacare. As in being covered by Obamacare next year. During debate over the law in 2009, Republicans insisted that if members of Congress were going to put their fellow Americans into health care exchanges, they and their staffs should be in there, too. … But vague language in this part of the law — which was passed three years ago this Saturday — has led to a slew of quirks and questions. Staffers who work in lawmakers’ personal offices go into exchanges — but those who work for committees don’t. And the lawmakers themselves get Obamacare — unless they are among the roughly 40 senators and 115 House members on Medicare. And there’s a big thorny unresolved question about money: whether members and staffers in exchanges will still get a significant part of their health insurance premiums subsidized by their employer, just like other government workers. If they lose that subsidy, it’s like getting a pay cut of several thousand dollars.” http://politi.co/ZViPBp


WaPo, A1, “Senate plan could double high-skilled worker visas,” By Peter Wallsten: “A Senate immigration plan would dramatically increase the number of high-skilled foreign workers allowed into the country and give permanent legal status to an unlimited number of students who earn graduate degrees from U.S. universities in science, technology, engineering or math, according to people familiar with the negotiations. The agreement would be a major victory for the tech industry, which has backed an intense lobbying campaign on Capitol Hill in recent months arguing that Google, Facebook, Microsoft and other companies are having trouble finding qualified workers because of visa limits.” http://wapo.st/15uVlWN


LEADERS NOT PEACHY ON PAUL BROUN VOTES – Jake Sherman and John Bresnahan have the story for POLITICO: “The messy politics of the Republican primary for Georgia’s open Senate seat has steamrolled its way into the Capitol. … Rep. Paul Broun — the only announced candidate to replace retiring Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss — is yanking much of the congressional delegation to the right and throwing their votes and the support of leadership into a daily flux. The problem: There are four House Republicans interested in the Senate seat. But the Peach State delegation and GOP leaders say they have no idea what Broun is up to at any given time, causing agitation for the other three congressmen — Reps. Phil Gingrey, Jack Kingston and Tom Price …Broun, laughing with his face flushing deep red, acknowledged that Gingrey and Kingston are looking closely at how he votes. ‘Imitation is the best form of flattery,’ Broun chuckled. Senate seats don’t come up too often, especially in a red state like Georgia, so primaries are contentious. And in this one, all of the candidates are seeking to run to the right of each other.” http://politi.co/ZVg4jg


McCASKILL WRITING BOOK ON RACE VS. AKIN – Joe Holleman writes for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch: “Expect a book from Claire McCaskill, in which she will ‘tell the whole story’ about last year’s raucous and bitter U.S. Senate race against U.S. Rep. Todd Akin. [Wednesday] on Jamie Allman’s ‘Allman in the Morning’ show on KFTK-FM (NewsTalk 97.1), the incumbent Democrat said the book will focus on the hubbub that engulfed the contest after Republican Akin said in an interview that women who had been victimized by ‘legitimate rape’ tended not to get pregnant. That statement was lambasted nationwide by most women’s and civil rights groups. In the interview, McCaskill tells Allman the race ‘was so interesting and I think that people need to understand that some of the extreme elements in this country — at both ends of the political spectrum — are not politically viable.’ McCaskill also said her camp most feared having to run against St. Louis County businessman John Brunner in the primary. She noted he would have been tough to campaign against because he had no past legislative record and ‘an unlimited checkbook.’” http://bit.ly/YHRXUs


WEDNESDAY’S TRIVIA – Jon Deuser was first to correctly answer that Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) was an intern for Rep. Keith Sebelius, who is the father-in-law to Kathleen Sebelius, the Health and Human Services secretary and former Kansas governor.


TODAY’S TRIVIA – Haley Loflin, who’s graduating from Norfolk Academy this year, has today’s question: This U.S. missile defense system was nicknamed after a popular movie. What was the movie? Bonus question: What actor from that movie appeared on Capitol Hill this week? First to correctly answer gets a mention in the next day’s Huddle. Email me at swong@politico.com.


GET HUDDLE emailed to your Blackberry, iPhone or other mobile device each morning. Just enter your email address where it says “Sign Up.” http://www.politico.com/huddle/


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POLITICO – Top 10 – The Huddle



In Congress, few flipping on gay marriage, Senate staffers "hottest," War over "balanced," Senate votes to avert shutdown, Ethics questions about Harkin Institute, McCaskill writing Akin book