But I agree that repetition isn't doing anything to help his point...
ETA:
I've gone back and edited my earlier post to include those other options.



Lord Jim wrote:ETA:
It may turn out that the one who comes out of this looking the best on the GOP side is Paul Ryan, who had the good sense to stay completely away from the "end Obamacare or we'll shoot the economy in the head" crowd, and who now looks like the guy who may have gotten the ball rolling to end this mess...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/ ... print.htmlBut instead of absorbing this painful reality, some rank-and-file Republicans grew visibly excited about the prospect of opposing such a deal, said one person in the room. This defiance was fed by Ryan, who stood up and railed against the Collins proposal, saying the House could not accept either a debt-limit bill or a government-funding measure that would delay the next fight until the new year.
According to two Republicans familiar with the exchange, Ryan argued that the House would need those deadlines as “leverage” for delaying the health-care law’s individual mandate and adding a “conscience clause” — allowing employers and insurers to opt out of birth-control coverage if they find it objectionable on moral or religious grounds — and mentioned tax and entitlement goals Ryan had focused on in a recent op-ed in the Wall Street Journal.
Ryan’s speech appeared only to further rile up the conservative wing of the GOP conference, which has been agitating the shutdown strategy to try to tear apart the health-care law.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/10 ... cels-vote/Senate leaders announce tentative budget deal
Senate leaders on Wednesday announced a bipartisan agreement to end the partial government shutdown and raise the debt ceiling, teeing up a string of votes which could start later in the day.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Republican Leader Mitch McConnell announced the "important agreement" on the floor.
Senators have been scrambling since Tuesday night to hammer out a proposal, following the collapse of a plan in the House of Representatives.
Talks were led by Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid and Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, who planned to discuss the framework with members of his caucus late Wednesday morning.
The framework on the Senate side would raise the debt ceiling through Feb. 7, and include a spending bill meant to last through Jan. 15. The plan would not include any provision relating to the ObamaCare medical device tax, as prior plans did; instead it would include a single provision meant to verify the income of those receiving ObamaCare subsidies. It would also instruct a bipartisan budget committee to report back on a broader plan by mid-December.
The House could be preparing to move the measure quickly, with a Thursday deadline to raise the debt ceiling looming.
On Tuesday, House Republicans failed to move on an alternate budget plan. House GOP leaders, after initially planning to vote on their plan sometime before midnight, shelved the proposal after leaders struggled to round up the votes. "It is over," one GOP aide told Fox News late Tuesday.
With that decision, focus shifted back to the Senate.
Amid discontent on the House side, conservatives were also unhappy with the Senate version and raised concerns that Senate Republicans would go along with it.
But with House Speaker John Boehner losing support for the latest House plan, the odds increased that the chamber could be left taking up whatever the Senate might send over.
Some Democrats urged Republicans to throw in the towel. "You have two options -- you can get bowled over by the Senate or you can get bowled over by the Senate," said one House Democratic aide.
Senate negotiators are racing against a Thursday deadline to raise the debt ceiling.
While the Senate had originally been crafting a bipartisan bill to address the budget impasse, House Republicans surprised Senate negotiators earlier Tuesday when they announced they were pursuing their own framework. Moving quickly, Boehner's office announced late Tuesday afternoon that the chamber would vote by the end of the night.
But a vital meeting of the House Rules Committee, which prepares bills for the floor, was then postponed -- a signal that House leaders were lacking the necessary votes.



I don't think it frames the question correctly to claim it is about giving the president new powers. I think the question is whether it is constitutional for the legislative branch to get two kicks at the cat, first by having to authorize appropriations, and then by being able to hold up the spending they authorized by refusing to raise the debt ceiling. I think it raises issues similar to those raised by the line item veto, which was deemed unconstitutional, in that both of them allow for picking and choosing between which authorized appropriations can be spent and which cannot, when there is nothing in the Constitution which would appear to create any sort of hierarchy of authorized appropriations.Big RR wrote:The point is that their failure to act does not suddenly give the president new powers.
Lib, there's so much wrong with that I hardly know where to start...(And after posting about the whole Nazi religion thing, at the moment I have neither the time nor the energy to go into it)Well, we could avoid default by the president taking the tax income we have coming in and using it to pay the interest on the debt first, but that would not leave much for everything else. One thing we could do would be to stop all foreign aid, but most of that money is already spent, but there is next year.
http://nationalpriorities.org/blog/2012 ... reign-aid/Foreign aid and diplomacy – which includes the State Department budget – together account for around 1 percent of all federal spending, or about $56 billion in President Obama's fiscal 2013 budget.



The Senate began to vote Wednesday on a short-term bill to end the partial government shutdown and raise the debt ceiling, as House Republican leaders indicated they were ready to back down on their demands that the legislation rein in ObamaCare.
The bill, to the dismay of some conservatives, does not include any major provisions pertaining to the health care law. But, with the House a day earlier unable to muster support for an alternate GOP plan, bipartisan Senate negotiators stepped up with the new proposal Wednesday afternoon.
The text of the plan was released shortly before the Senate started the vote series. The series will include one test vote, followed by a final vote. As the votes began, the White House released a statement saying the president would support the bill.
If the Senate and House approve the bill, it will go to President Obama for his signature -- and put an end, for now, to the historic showdown that has kept the government partly shuttered for more than two weeks. Putting additional pressure on lawmakers to reach an agreement, Congress was facing a Thursday deadline to raise the debt ceiling.
House Speaker John Boehner said earlier that the House "absolutely" will take up the Senate bill, even if he has to rely on mostly Democrats to pass it, and that he expects the partial government shutdown to end by Thursday.
"We fought the good fight. We just didn't win," he said in an interview with Cincinnati radio station WLW-AM.
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/10 ... -block-it/



That's the ultimate irony of this...Cool, now we can get back to pointing out the myriad problems with the ACA, which even liberals are declaring are declaring to be a disastrous rollout.



Lord Jim wrote:If you think we're going to make any meaningful dent in the deficit by eliminating foreign aid, (which would be foolhardy for any number of reasons) then please pass that pipe and let me take a hit...
Okay Lib, I'll go through the math with you on this...Jim please be patient and explain to be me why ending foreign aids would be foolhardy for us?
Lord Jim wrote:52 billion out of 3 trillion dollar budget?
Wow, I didn't realize what a good deal we were getting. We should probably increase it.
dgs49 wrote:You consider this a good ROI?
The minority view, I would wager.
Lib, I don't think you really understand what's achieved with "foreign aid" nor how small a part of the US budget it represents...[that 50 billion dollar figure doesn't just represent "foreign aid" it represents the entire cost of the State Department...and it's miniscule, when you look at the total budget...]Lord Jim wrote:In the past 12 years, the country has suffered exactly one significant terrorist attack, (The Boston Marathon Bombing) while dozens have been foiled...
And this record has been achieved at a cost of less than 2% of the federal budget....
Yeah, I consider that an excellent ROI, and if that's a minority view, I'm good with that...
I can't be responsible for the ignorance of the majority...


