Showing posts with label Lawmakers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lawmakers. Show all posts

Saturday, March 29, 2014

N.Y. lawmakers, Governor Cuomo, strike budget deal before Monday vote



Sat Mar 29, 2014 4:44pm EDT



New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo smiles as he pauses during his fourth State of the State address from the New York State Capitol in Albany, New York, January 8, 2014 file photo. REUTERS/Mike Segar

New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo smiles as he pauses during his fourth State of the State address from the New York State Capitol in Albany, New York, January 8, 2014 file photo.


Credit: Reuters/Mike Segar




(Reuters) – Before a planned vote on Monday, New York legislators and Governor Andrew Cuomo reached a deal on the state’s 2014-2015 budget after several weeks of negotiating behind closed doors, according to state officials on Saturday.


The budget keeps growth in all funds spending below 2 percent at $ 137.9 billion and provides funding for statewide pre-kindergarten programs. It also cuts business taxes and introduces property tax relief for homeowners, Governor Cuomo said on Saturday.


The agreement comes after budget bills were printed late on Friday night, allowing lawmakers to vote on the plan on Monday, the last day of the state’s financial year. If passed, the budget would be Cuomo’s fourth on-time budget in a row.


“It has to be passed, and we don’t want to get ahead of ourselves, but it was a good piece of work,” Cuomo told reporters on a conference call.


The new budget earmarks $ 1.5 billion in property tax relief for homeowners. It also includes an increase of more than 5 percent in school aid, $ 300 million of which will go to pre-kindergarten in New York City and provides new protections for charter schools.


Lawmakers rejected New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s request for a tax hike on the city’s wealthy to help fund classes for preschoolers and pay for after-school programs.


The budget looks to cut taxes and create jobs by establishing a 20 percent real estate property tax credit for manufacturers who own or lease property. And, beginning in 2014, it will slash the tax rate on income for all manufacturers from the current 5.9 percent to zero.


Through budget initiatives, tougher bribery and anti-corruption laws will be implemented, and about $ 162 million will go to New York’s Environmental Protection Fund, an increase of $ 9 million over the previous budget.


Also, young people and new drivers will face stricter laws governing texting while driving. Licenses will be suspended for 120 days for first-time offenders, and a year’s suspension will be imposed for those convicted twice.


At the same time, New York State’s budget will fund a Commission on Youth, Public Safety and Justice. The commission will be entrusted to develop recommendations on ways to help raise the age at which juveniles are tried.


New York is one of only two states that prosecute 16- and 17-year olds through the adult criminal justice system.


(Reporting By Theopolis Waters in Chicago and Edward Krudy in New York; editing by Gunna Dickson)






Reuters: Politics



N.Y. lawmakers, Governor Cuomo, strike budget deal before Monday vote

Friday, March 28, 2014

California senate suspends three Democratic lawmakers in criminal probes

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California senate suspends three Democratic lawmakers in criminal probes

Thursday, March 20, 2014

US Lawmakers Fight Russia on Twitter: "I Guess This Means My Spring Break in Siberia Is Off"

US Lawmakers Fight Russia on Twitter: "I Guess This Means My Spring Break in Siberia Is Off"
http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Motherjones/mojoblog/~4/4ixxP0kTLhk


On Thursday, shortly after President Obama expanded sanctions against Russia for its role in the Ukraine crisis, the Russian Foreign Ministry released its own list of nine US officials and lawmakers who will be targeted by sanctions. The list includes three White House aides—deputy national security advisors Ben Rhodes and Caroline Atkinson, and senior advisor Dan Pfeiffer—as well as six US lawmakers: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.)​, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.)​, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio)​, Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.)​, Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.)​, and Sen. Dan Coats (R-Ind.)​.


Many of the Sanctioned 9, none of whom will be allowed to visit the Russian Federation or attend Valdimir Putin’s birthday party (assuming it is held in the Russian Federation), took to Twitter to win the morning show their strength and solidarity.


Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.)​





Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.)



Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.)​



Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.)





Sen. Dan Coats (R-Ind.)





Brendan Buck, spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), to senior White House advisor Dan Pfeiffer



“What did you do during the war, daddy?”


“Twitter, mostly.”



Political Mojo | Mother Jones




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Monday, February 24, 2014

Lawmakers call for restriction on Venezuelan oil, gas imports

Lawmakers call for restriction on Venezuelan oil, gas imports
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By Marianela Toledo | Florida Watchdog


MIAMI — Two Florida congressmen are demanding the Obama administration to take a strong stand against Venezuela and restrict oil flowing from the South American nation into the United States.



IN SUPPORT: Venezuela protester by the thousands gathered this past weekend in Doral, a city in Miami-Dade County known for its large Venezuelan population.



“We want to expel Venezuela’s embassy officials in Washington,” U.S. Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen said last week during a news conference.


In September, Maduro’s government accused the top American diplomat and two other embassy officials of supporting plots to sabotage the country’s economy and electrical grid, ordering the trio to leave the country immediately.


The South Florida Republican congresswoman was joined by fellow South Florida Republican U.S. Rep. Mario Diaz Balart in calling for stranger opposition to the government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.


Unrest in Venezuela has been going on for years. But the situation exploded on Feb. 12 when thousands of young people took to the streets Maduro’s government. The rally ended in a violent clash in which three protesters were killed, 60 were injured  and hundreds were jail.


Since then, protesters have remained in the streets demanding the release of detainees. They also wants and end to censorship, repression, product shortages, police abuse, and the release of opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez.


Lopez voluntarily surrendered  last week to Venezuelan authorities who accused him of several serious crimes.


During the weekend, thousands of people gathered in South Florida to show support for the Venezuela protesters.



YouTube

The Florida congressmen want say they will proposed legislation to block visas, property purchased and financial transactions of those who have been involved in suspected human-rights violations. Additionally, Ros-Lehtinen is calling for restrictions on buying oil and gasoline from Venezuela.


Ros-Lehtinen, chairman of the House Middle East and North Africa subcommittee, last week asked Secretary of State John Kerry to reduce by at least 10 percent the amount of oil imports from Venezuela. The move is, he said, in response to the ongoing conflict in Venezuela and the “countless human rights violations occurring.”


Importing less oil and gasoline, she said, will “send a signal of support to those being oppressed by the Maduro regime.”


But not everyone agrees it’s a good move.


“These are long- term contracts between gas stations and oil companies,” said  Max Alvarez,  vice president of Sunshine Gasoline Distributors Inc.


Cutting back on Venezuelan gasoline will force gas retailers to look elsewhere, pay higher prices and pass the increased cost on to consumers.



NEVER GIVE UP: The sign one protester carries reads, “If you get tired, you loose.”



“Citgo gas stations are not the Venezuelan government,” Alvarez said.


In fact, he said, they belong to independent owners who buy Citgo gasoline from the Venezuelan government “but operate no differently than Chevron or Shell who buy oil from Venezuela.”


According to Citgo’s website they have about 740 gas stations in Florida.


“Almost every company except Exxon Mobil are in Venezuela pumping and refining oil,” Alvarez said, adding that any instability in any part of the world will “impact on the price of oil and gasoline” whether it’s Venezuela or the Middle East.


“I don’t think we should panic,” he said. The good news is that “the price of gasoline has remained fairly stable over the last year.”


In the past month, drivers in Florida on average have seen a 10-cents per gallon hike in gasoline prices for regular grade, from $ 3.35 per gallon to $ 3.45, according to AAA in Florida. A year ago, AAA said, the average price for regular grade in the Sunshine State was $ 3.87.


AAA spokesman Mark Jenkins said in addition to troubles in Venezuela, weather and maintenance at refineries are sending pump prices higher.


Ros-Lehtinen is calling for a special meeting of the Organization of American States to garner support for a tough stance on Venezuela.


“I also urge responsible nations throughout the Western Hemisphere to hear the calls for democracy coming from the streets of Venezuela and abide by the principles instilled in the Inter-American Democratic Charter by convening a special session at the OAS to discuss the escalating conflict,” she said.


U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., said in a statement released Thursday that “the (Obama)  administration should use every diplomatic means necessary to draw attention to the courageous efforts of Venezuelans, the cowardice of Maduro’s government, and impose sanctions on those planning and actively participating in repressive and violent acts.”


Florida Gov. Rick Scott also offered his support, saying “we must unite with the people of Venezuela who are fighting for their democracy and freedom.”


“It is our duty to support those who struggle for freedom under oppression in places like Venezuela and Cuba,” Scott said.


Speaking with reporters last week in Mexico, Obama urged the Venezuelan government to free young people arrested during the protests.


“Along with the Organization of American States, we call on the Venezuelan government to release protesters it has detained and engage in actual dialogue,” Obama said. “Rather than trying to distract from its own failings by making up false accusations against diplomats from the United States, the government ought to focus on addressing the legitimate grievances of the Venezuelan people.”


Contact Marianela Toledo at Marianela.Toledo@FloridaWatchdog.org or on Twitter @mtoledoreporter



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Thursday, February 13, 2014

California Lawmakers Want To Protect Rape Victims By Updating The State’s Definition Of ‘Consent’

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California Lawmakers Want To Protect Rape Victims By Updating The State’s Definition Of ‘Consent’

State lawmakers move to cut power, water to spy headquarters...

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State lawmakers move to cut power, water to spy headquarters...

Sunday, January 19, 2014

US lawmakers raise safety concerns about Olympics







In this Friday, Jan. 17, 2014 photo made available by Presidential Press Service on Sunday, Jan. 19, 2014, Russian President Vladimir Putin, listens during an interview to Russian and foreign media at the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi, which will host Winter Olympic Games on Feb. 7, 2014. President Vladimir Putin once again has offered assurances to gays planning to attend the Sochi Olympics, but his arguments defending Russia’s ban on homosexual “propaganda” to minors show the vast gulf between how he understands the issues and how homosexuality is generally viewed in the West. In an interview with Russian and foreign television stations broadcast Sunday, Putin equated gays with pedophiles and spoke of the need for Russia to “cleanse” itself of homosexuality as part of efforts to increase the birth rate. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Alexei Nikolsky, Presidential Press Service)





In this Friday, Jan. 17, 2014 photo made available by Presidential Press Service on Sunday, Jan. 19, 2014, Russian President Vladimir Putin, listens during an interview to Russian and foreign media at the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi, which will host Winter Olympic Games on Feb. 7, 2014. President Vladimir Putin once again has offered assurances to gays planning to attend the Sochi Olympics, but his arguments defending Russia’s ban on homosexual “propaganda” to minors show the vast gulf between how he understands the issues and how homosexuality is generally viewed in the West. In an interview with Russian and foreign television stations broadcast Sunday, Putin equated gays with pedophiles and spoke of the need for Russia to “cleanse” itself of homosexuality as part of efforts to increase the birth rate. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Alexei Nikolsky, Presidential Press Service)













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(AP) — Members of Congress expressed serious concerns Sunday about the safety of Americans at next month’s Olympics in Russia and said Moscow needs to cooperate more on security.


Suicide bombings last month in the southern Russian city of Volgograd, about 400 miles from where the Sochi Games will be held, have contributed to the safety anxiety. Russian President Vladimir Putin has promised that his country will do all it can to ensure a safe Olympics without imposing security measures that are too intrusive.


The State Department has advised Americans who plan to attend the Olympics, which run Feb. 7-23, that they should keep vigilant about security because of potential terrorist threats, crime and uncertain medical care.


“We don’t seem to be getting all of the information we need to protect our athletes in the games,” said Rep. Mike Rogers, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee. “I think this needs to change, and it should change soon.”


But FBI Director James Comey said earlier in January that the Russian government “understands the threat and is devoting the resources to address it.”


Rogers, R-Mich., contended that the Russians “aren’t giving us the full story about what are the threat streams, who do we need to worry about, are those groups, the terrorist groups who have had some success, are they still plotting? There’s a missing gap, and you never want that when you go into something I think as important as the Olympic Games and the security of the athletes, and the participants and those who come to watch.”


Rep. Michael McCaul, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said from Moscow that he planned to be in Sochi on Monday to assess the security situation.


“All the briefings that I’ve received, from the intelligence community to the FBI and others, indicate that there are serious concerns, and that we need to do a lot to step up security. I do believe Putin is doing a lot of that,” said McCaul, R-Texas.


While he said diplomatic security has declared Russian cooperation on safety measures is good, he said “it could be a lot better, and that’s one thing I want to press while I’m over here.”


Comey, the FBI head, told reporters this month in Washington that “we have been in regular communication — including me personally — with their security organizations to make sure we’re coordinating well. I think that we are. We’ve improved our information sharing on counterterrorism and it’s important.”


No one has claimed responsibility for the December bombings in Volgograd. But the blasts followed Chechen warlord Doku Umarov’s call to launch attacks on the Olympics.


“I would not go, and I don’t think I would send my family,” said Sen. Angus King, I-Maine.


An insurgency seeking to create an independent Islamic state in the Caucasus has swept the region after two separatist wars in Chechnya. Chechnya’s Moscow-backed strongman, Ramzan Kadyrov, claimed Thursday that Umarov was dead, but he offered no proof to the claim he had repeatedly made in the past.


The province of Dagestan, located between Chechnya and the Caspian Sea, about 300 miles east of Sochi, has become the center of the rebellion, with daily shootings and bombings of police and other officials.


Rogers appeared on CNN’s “State of the Union” and CBS’ “Face the Nation.” King was on CNN and McCaul spoke on ABC’s “This Week.”


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



US lawmakers raise safety concerns about Olympics

Lawmakers say Obama surveillance idea won"t work

Lawmakers say Obama surveillance idea won"t work

WASHINGTON (AP) — A chief element of President Barack Obama’s attempt to overhaul U.S. surveillance will not work, leaders of Congress’ intelligence committees said Sunday, pushing back against the idea that the government should cede control of how Americans’ phone records are stored.
Business Headlines



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Thursday, December 5, 2013

Do-nothing Congress: Lawmakers pass more blame than bills




  • Congress is on track to have its least productive year in recent history

  • Boehner blames the Democratic Senate, White House, cites 148 House-passed bills

  • Many targeted Obamacare, dealt with shutdown with no chance of passage

  • Democrats blame House conservatives for impeding legislative progress



Tune in to “Crossfire” on CNN Thursday at 6:30pm ET. Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT) and Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-IL) join hosts S.E. Cupp and Stephanie Cutter to debate who is to blame for the do-nothing Congress.


Washington (CNN) — Congress is on pace to have its least productive year in modern history, earning a “do-nothing” label and adding another unwanted statistic to a body already facing chronically low approval ratings.


Cue the blame game.


“To date, the House has passed nearly 150 bills this Congress that the United States Senate has failed to act on,” Republican Speaker John Boehner argued Wednesday. “The Senate (and) the President continue to stand in the way of the people’s priorities.”


Democrats are tossing responsibility right back in the GOP’s lap, arguing that hardline House conservatives are blocking legislative progress.



• Number of laws passed so far by the 113th Congress — 56: Sound substantial? Check out the breakdown.

• Bills limited to one piece of land or region — 10: These include the Denali Park Improvement Act, the Freedom to Fish Act and the Minuteman Missile National Historic Site Boundary Modification Act.


• Reauthorization of laws –5: The U.S. Parole Commission, a congressional award program and a handful of other regular pieces of business were reauthorized — not exactly heavy lifting.


• Keeping government running — 5: Congress repeatedly had to vote to fund government and keep the bureaucracy from hitting its self-imposed debt ceiling.


• Naming things — 4: Congress voted to name a bridge, a VA building, an air traffic control tower and a section of the IRS Code.


• What else did they do? Most of the others were focused and had limited impact. One dealt with how to handle organ transplants from HIV+ donors. Another delayed new pipeline safety standards.


• There were a few heavy lifts: The House and Senate agreed on reauthorizing the Violence Against Women Act, prepared for a possible pandemic flu and handled the nation’s helium reserve, pivotal in the medical world.)


• Stuck in idle: Immigration; jobs and the economy; energy reform/Keystone pipeline/climate change; future Medicare insolvency; future Social Security insolvency.




Meanwhile, America’s national legislature is growing increasingly dysfunctional.


No deal, but sides said to be closer on budget deal


So far, 56 bills have been signed into law in the first session of the 113th Congress. Assuming legislators don’t pick up the pace next year — and the smart money says they won’t as the midterms draw near — this will become the least productive Congress in at least the last 40 years, according to a CNN analysis of congressional records.


Is the fact that fewer bills have become law necessarily a bad thing? That depends on your point of view. But representatives and senators on both sides of the aisle readily acknowledge that some major issues have not been addressed.


GOP obstruction of Obamacare is closing hospitals


Congress hasn’t passed a budget, among other things. None of the 12 annual spending bills has made it to the President’s desk. We don’t have a new farm bill. Immigration reform is stalled. Tax and entitlement reform are dead in the water.


Adding insult to injury, in October the federal government had its first partial shutdown in nearly two decades.


The most important issue in Washington political circles, naturally, is who’s responsible.


Democrats point out that roughly one-third of the 148 bills passed by the GOP-controlled House so far this year were attempts to repeal, delay or defund Obamacare that had zero chance of passing the Senate or surviving a certain presidential veto.


Washington could still screw up your holidays


More than a dozen of those measures were also partisan, piecemeal spending bills passed during the government shutdown that had no chance of being signed into law.


Some of them had nothing to do with major issues at all, such as the bills renaming courthouses in Sherman, Texas, and Fergus Falls, Minnesota.


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has called the House GOP a bunch of “modern-day anarchists.” But Republicans argue that Democrats are standing in the way of priorities such as entitlement reform. Democrats are standing in the way of a major overhaul of the tax code, they insist.


While both the House and the Senate passed farm bills, Democrats are blocking much-needed changes to the country’s agriculture laws, Republicans say.


As is usually the case in Washington, your opinion of which party is to blame is probably determined by which party you belong to. Meanwhile, Democrats and Republicans are growing more ideologically distant by the day.


And that is a recipe for gridlock.


Opinion: Here’s something Congress could actually do




CNN.com Recently Published/Updated



Do-nothing Congress: Lawmakers pass more blame than bills

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Lawmakers hope Senate leaders can break fiscal impasse as deadline looms



Lawmakers hope Senate leaders can break fiscal impasse as deadline looms

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Obama, lawmakers to hold meeting on shutdown







Barricades are posted in front of the closed Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2013. The political stare-down on Capitol Hill shows no signs of easing, leaving federal government functions _ from informational websites, to national parks, to processing veterans’ claims _ in limbo from coast to coast. Lawmakers in both parties ominously suggested the partial shutdown might last for weeks. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)





Barricades are posted in front of the closed Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2013. The political stare-down on Capitol Hill shows no signs of easing, leaving federal government functions _ from informational websites, to national parks, to processing veterans’ claims _ in limbo from coast to coast. Lawmakers in both parties ominously suggested the partial shutdown might last for weeks. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)





The sun rises behind the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2013. The political stare-down on Capitol Hill shows no signs of easing, leaving federal government functions _ from informational websites, to national parks, to processing veterans’ claims _ in limbo from coast to coast. Lawmakers in both parties ominously suggested the partial shutdown might last for weeks. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)





With the federal government out of money and out of time, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., center, meets with House GOP conferees as the Republican-controlled House and the Democrat-controlled Senate remain at an impasse, neither side backing down over Obamacare, Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2013, on Capitol Hill in Washington. From left are, House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., Cantor, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Rep. Dave Camp , R-Mich., and Rep. Tom Graves, R-Ga. Graves led an effort with other emboldened conservatives that forced Speaker Boehner and the leadership to tie the money needed to keep the government running with defunding Obamacare. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of Calif., and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev., arrive on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2013, for an event to celebrate the start of the Affordable Care Act, popularly known as Obamacare, with other lawmakers and people whose lives have been impacted by lack of health insurance. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)













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(AP) — President Barack Obama summoned congressional leaders to the White House on Wednesday as a partial government shutdown entered a second day with little sign of a breakthrough to get hundreds of thousands of people back to work. Some on Capitol Hill ominously suggested the impasse might last for weeks, but a few Republicans seemed ready to blink.


House Speaker John Boehner’s office said the Ohio Republican would attend the White House meeting Wednesday afternoon, casting it as a sign the president is ready to start negotiating on GOP demands to extract changes to the new health care law in exchange for funding the government.


“We’re pleased the president finally recognizes that his refusal to negotiate is indefensible,”" Boehner spokesman Brendan Buck said. “It’s unclear why we’d be having this meeting if it’s not meant to be a start to serious talks between the two parties.”


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., Senate Minority Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., were also to attend the White House meeting. An Obama adviser said Obama would urge House Republicans to pass a spending bill free of other demands.


Some Republican lawmakers appear ready to take that step. Republican Rep. Peter King of New York accused tea party-backed lawmakers of trying to “hijack the party” and said he senses that a growing number of rank-and-file House Republicans — perhaps as many as a hundred — are tired of the shutdown that began Tuesday morning and will be meeting to look for a way out.


But GOP leaders and tea party-backed members seemed determined to press on. The House GOP leadership announced plans to continue trying to open more popular parts of the government. They planned to pass five bills to open national parks, processing of veterans’ claims, the Washington, D.C., government, medical research, and to pay members of the National Guard.


The White House immediately promised a veto, saying opening the government on a piecemeal basis is unacceptable.


“Instead of opening up a few government functions, the House of Representatives should re-open all of the government,” the White House said in an official policy statement.


The move presented Democrats with politically challenging votes but they rejected the idea, saying it was unfair to pick winners and losers as federal employees worked without a guarantee of getting paid and the effects of the partial shutdown rippled through the country and the economy.


Funding for much of the U.S. government was halted after Republicans hitched a routine spending bill to their effort to kill or delay the health care law they call “Obamacare.” The president accuses them of holding the government hostage.


Rep. Jason Chaffetz, a tea party favorite, said there would be no solution until President Barack Obama and Democrats who control the Senate agree to discuss problems with the nation’s unfolding health care overhaul.


“The pigsty that is Washington, D.C., gets mud on a lot of people and the question is what are you going to do moving forward,” Chaffetz, R-Utah, said on CBS’ “This Morning.”


Meanwhile, another financial showdown even more critical to the economy was looming. Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew told Congress that unless lawmakers act in time, he will run out of money to pay the nation’s bills by Oct. 17. Congress must periodically raise the limit on government borrowing to keep U.S. funds flowing, a once-routine matter that has become locked in battles over the federal budget deficit.


Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, the second-ranking House Democrat, said Democrats would overwhelmingly accept a short-term spending measure to reopen the government and increase the nation’s debt limit while other political differences are worked out. “That would be a responsible way to go,” Hoyer told CNN.


At issue is the need to pass a temporary funding bill to keep the government open since the start of the new budget year on Tuesday.


Congress has passed 87 temporary funding bills since 1999, virtually all of them without controversy. Now, conservative Republicans have held up the measure in the longshot hope of derailing or delaying Obamacare.


Fed-up Americans took to Facebook and Twitter to call members of Congress “stupid” or “idiots.” Some blamed Republicans while others blasted Obama or Democrats “who spend our tax dollars like crack addicts.”


Bruce Swedal, a 46-year-old Denver real estate agent, tweeted to Congress members: “You should not be getting paid. In fact, you all should be fired!”


Some 800,000 federal workers deemed nonessential were staying home again Wednesday in the first partial shutdown since the winter of 1995-96.


Across the nation, America roped off its most hallowed symbols: the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia, the Statue of Liberty in New York, Mount Rushmore in South Dakota, the Washington Monument.


Its natural wonders — the Grand Canyon, Yosemite, the Smoky Mountains and more — put up “Closed” signs and shooed campers away.


Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia said he was getting pleas from businesses that rely on tourists. “The restaurants, the hotels, the grocery stores, the gasoline stations, they’re all very devastated with the closing of the parks,” he said.


The far-flung effects reached France, where tourists were barred from the U.S. cemetery overlooking the D-Day beaches at Normandy. Twenty-four military cemeteries abroad have been closed.


While U.S. military personnel are getting paid during the shutdown, thousands of civilian Defense employees are being furloughed.


Even fall football is in jeopardy. The Defense Department said it wasn’t clear that service academies would be able to participate in sports, putting Saturday’s Army vs. Boston College and Air Force vs. Navy football games on hold, with a decision to be made Thursday.


The White House said Obama would have to truncate a long-planned trip to Asia, calling off the final two stops in Malaysia and the Philippines.


Even as many government agencies closed their doors, the health insurance exchanges that are at the core of Obama’s health care law were up and running, taking applications for coverage that would start Jan. 1.


“Shutting down our government doesn’t accomplish their stated goal,” Obama said of his Republican opponents at a Rose Garden event Tuesday hailing implementation of the law. He said the Affordable Care Act “is settled, and it is here to stay.”


___


Associated Press writers Connie Cass, Lauran Neergaard and Merrill Hartson contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



Obama, lawmakers to hold meeting on shutdown

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Shutdown Tug Of War Pulls Lawmakers Into Weekend Session





House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio arrives at the U.S. Capitol Saturday. He scheduled a closed-door meeting with Republican lawmakers over legislation to fund the federal government past Monday.



Molly Riley/AP

House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio arrives at the U.S. Capitol Saturday. He scheduled a closed-door meeting with Republican lawmakers over legislation to fund the federal government past Monday.



House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio arrives at the U.S. Capitol Saturday. He scheduled a closed-door meeting with Republican lawmakers over legislation to fund the federal government past Monday.


Molly Riley/AP



Lawmakers from both parties urged one another in a rare weekend session to give ground in their fight over preventing a federal shutdown, with the midnight Monday deadline fast approaching.


But there was no sign of yielding Saturday in a down-to-the-wire struggle that Tea Party lawmakers are using to try derailing President Obama’s health care law.


Obama, in his weekly radio and Internet address, accused House Republicans of being more concerned “with appeasing an extreme faction of their party than working to pass abudget.”


With pressure mounting on splintered Republicans, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, scheduled a closed-door, lunchtime meeting of GOP lawmakers to see what, if any, legislation he could push through that might prevent large parts of the government from shuttering.


Failure to pass a short-term measure to keeping the government running would mean the first partial closing in almost 20 years.


With nothing much to work on, House members took to their chamber’s floor and mixed name-calling with cries for compromise.


“I’ve got a titanium backbone. Let ‘em blame, let ‘em talk, it’s fine,” said Rep. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., about Democratic claims that the GOP would be at fault if the government must close.


She said the GOP wanted to keep the government open, but also wanted to reduce its size and “delay, defund, repeal and replace Obamacare,” as the health law is known.


Should the House approve legislation on the looming shutdown, a vote seemed most likely Sunday, leaving little time for the Senate to respond on Monday.


Senators on Friday sent a bill to the House that would keep the government’s doors open until Nov. 15. But Democrats removed a provision to defund the health law, officially called the Affordable Care Act.



The Senate’s 54-44 vote was strictly along party lines in favor of the bill, which would prevent a shutdown of nonessential government services.


That followed a 79-19 vote to cut off a filibuster by Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, that exposed a rift among Republicans eager to prevent a shutdown and those, like Cruz, who seem willing to risk one over the health overhaul.


All 52 Democrats, two independents and 25 of 44 Republicans voted in favor. That included Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and most of the GOP leadership.


Cruz was trying to rally House conservatives to continue thebattleover heath care. He was urging them to reject efforts by Boehner and other GOP leaders to offer scaled-back assaults on the law such as repealing a tax on medical devices as the House response.


Some conservatives were taking their cues from Cruz rather than party leaders such as Boehner hoping to avoid a shutdown. Closing down the government could weaken Republicans heading into an even more importantbattlelater in October over allowing the government to borrow more money.


“We now move on to the next stage of thisbattle,” Cruz said after the Senate vote. He told reporters he had had numerous conversations with fellow conservatives in recent days.


“I am confident the House of Representatives will continue to stand its ground, continue to listen to the American people and … stop this train wreck, this nightmare that is Obamacare,” he said.


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., warned that the Senate will not accept any House measure that contains provisions opposed by Democrats.


He knows better than anyone that any single senator could slow down the Senate’s ability to return yet another version to the House.


“This is it. Time is gone,” Reid said.


If lawmakers miss the deadline, hundreds of thousands of nonessential federal workers would have to stay home on Tuesday.


Critical services such 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.


The new health insurance exchanges would open Tuesday, a development that’s lent urgency to the drive to use a normally routine stopgap spending bill to gut implementation of the law.




News



Shutdown Tug Of War Pulls Lawmakers Into Weekend Session

Friday, September 6, 2013

Obama"s plan on Syria hinges on undecided U.S. lawmakers


U.S. President Barack Obama speaks about Syria during a joint news conference with Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt at the Prime Minister

U.S. President Barack Obama speaks about Syria during a joint news conference with Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt at the Prime Minister’s office in Stockholm, Sweden September 4, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque






WASHINGTON | Thu Sep 5, 2013 8:07pm EDT



WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The fate of a congressional resolution to authorize President Barack Obama’s planned military strikes on Syria hinged on Thursday on scores of undecided U.S. lawmakers, with party loyalty appearing increasingly irrelevant.


Even after congressional hearings featuring Obama’s secretaries of state and defense, a half dozen closed-door briefings and phone calls from Obama himself, it was too close to call on whether Congress will authorize military force.


Obama asked Congress to back his plan for limited strikes in response to a chemical weapons attack on civilians that the United States blames on Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s forces.


First-term Democratic Senator Joe Manchin, who had been seen as a possible swing vote, dealt the president a setback when he announced on Thursday he would oppose the resolution to authorize military strikes.


“Given the case that has been presented to me, I believe that a military strike against Syria at this time is the wrong course of action,” Manchin said.


Republican Representative Michael Grimm, who initially backed Obama’s call last month for military strikes, withdrew his support on Thursday. “Unfortunately, the time to act was then and the moment to show our strength has passed,” said Grimm, a Marine combat veteran.


If Obama fails to win congressional support, he would face two undesirable options. One would be to go ahead with military strikes anyway, which could provoke an angry showdown with Congress over their respective powers.


The other would be to do nothing, which White House officials privately acknowledge would damage the credibility of any future Obama ultimatum to other countries.


Twenty-four of the Senate’s 100 members oppose or lean toward opposing authorizing military strikes, according to estimates by several news organizations, with an equal number favoring military action and roughly 50 undecided.


Every vote will count in the Senate, where a super-majority of 60 will likely be needed because of possible procedural hurdles for a final vote on approving military action.


A count by the Washington Post listed 103 members of the House of Representatives as undecided, of whom 62 are Democrats. There are 433 members currently sitting in the House.


Party loyalty, which drives most issues in a Congress known for its partisan gridlock, was becoming increasingly irrelevant, particularly among Obama’s fellow Democrats. Some Democratic liberals who usually line up behind Obama’s policies have expressed reluctance to back an attack on Syria.


‘I’M AN ADULT’


“I support the president,” said Democratic Representative Bill Pascrell, who remained undecided.


“I want him to succeed. But he isn’t asking me to be – nor will I be – a lap dog. So I will make my own decision. I’m an adult,” Pascrell said.


Republicans have opposed Obama on a host of issues in Congress – and those aligned with the conservative Tea Party movement appear likely to do so on this matter. But other Republicans who favor strong American engagement internationally are lining up behind the Syria military strike authorization.


Most House Republicans are expected to vote “no,” even though their top two leaders, Speaker John Boehner and Majority Leader Eric Cantor, have endorsed the military strikes.


While Obama administration officials continued to express confidence about ultimately winning congressional support, it was clear on Thursday that their blitz of briefings was not having the desired impact, especially with many lawmakers reporting opposition to strikes among their constituents.


Manchin said he listened to the concerns of thousands of people in his home state of West Virginia, attended hearings and briefings, and spoke with former and current military leaders.


In a statement, he said that “in good conscience, I cannot support” the resolution authorizing force and that he will work to develop other options. “I believe that we must exhaust all diplomatic options and have a comprehensive plan for international involvement before we act,” Manchin added.


Democratic Senator Barbara Mikulski told reporters, “I have more questions than I have answers, and I hope to get them over the course of today and tomorrow.”


She spoke as she entered the latest closed-door session on Thursday with Obama’s national security team, only to emerge two hours later saying she still had “more questions.”


“What we heard today made a compelling forensic case that, one, nerve gas was used, and number two, that it was used” by Assad’s forces, Mikulski said. “The next step, then, has to be … what is the way to both deter and degrade his ability to ever do it again? … Does a military strike do that?”


FIRST HURDLE CLEARED


The Democratic-controlled Senate and Republican-controlled House both must approve the measure. It cleared its first hurdle on Wednesday when the Senate Foreign Relations Committee approved the resolution by a 10-7 vote – with Democrats and Republicans voting on both sides of the issue.


The full Senate is likely to begin voting next Wednesday, a Senate aide said. It will start with a vote on an anticipated legislative roadblock by Republicans, and then move on to a vote on the resolution to authorize the use of force, the aide added.


The timing of a vote in the House remained unclear.


Memories of the protracted wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are still fresh in the minds of members of Congress, leaving many in both parties worried that a military strike could lead to a longer and larger U.S. engagement in Syria.


If Obama is going to win passage of the measure in the House, he must convince fellow Democrats like Representative Zoe Lofgren and Pascrell.


The two liberals have been reliable Obama allies on a crush of issues since Obama entered office, but now voice plenty of questions and concerns about his bid to attack Syria.


Lofgren joined a conference call for House Democrats on Monday given by Obama administration officials. Lofgren complained that the briefing did not provide nearly as much information as she had sought and disliked at least a portion of Secretary of State John Kerry’s presentation.


Kerry invoked memories of Nazi Germany when he told the House Democrats that the United States faces “a Munich moment” in deciding whether to wage military strikes against Syria.


“I thought it was a very unfortunate comment. We need facts, not overheated emotional rhetoric,” Lofgren said.


(Additional reporting by Susan Cornwell, Susan Heavey and Rachelle Younglai; Editing by Fred Barbash and Will Dunham)






Reuters: Politics



Obama"s plan on Syria hinges on undecided U.S. lawmakers