This is what I just published as an op-ed... it's long... but I think it sums things up....
Governing by Crisis
Today is day eight of the governmental shutdown. What does this mean? It means that veterans who are relying on the 9/11 GI Bill to go to school won’t have their tuition paid, won’t get their living stipend or their book stipend. It means that mothers with very young children (between newborns and age five) and pregnant women who qualify won’t receive supplemental nutrition, in the form of WIC. It means that almost ten thousand children won’t be going to Head Start. It means that contractors, who form the backbone of our government, won’t get paid at all. It means that while furloughed government workers will get paid, they would much rather be at their jobs, doing the work that they are paid to do. In the meantime, our elected officials will get paid. They made sure of that with the 27th Amendment.
And yet, the government is at a stand still. With forty-nine members of the House, and five members in the Senate, the Tea Party has managed to push the Republican Party so far to the right, and force this shutdown with one demand. Defund the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
There is only one problem with this demand… you can’t defund something that is already fully funded. It would be like defunding Social Security or Medicare.
These are the same people who have voted forty-two times to repeal this law, and failed. These are the same people who held the country hostage in 2011, and forced concessions out of the President during the debt ceiling crisis, resulting not only in the sequester, but in the downgrade of our nation’s credit rating.
They want piecemeal legislation to fund things that they think will make them look good… funding for the NIH, that took a huge hit in the sequester, because who needs research into cancer cures? Suddenly, with parents complaining that their children aren’t being allowed into the cancer drug trials that they were supposed to start, Congress wants to fund the NIH, but only at the post sequester levels. (The NIH lost 1.55 billion in funding due to the sequester in FY 2013) (National Intitutes of Health, 2013)
The Senate Budget Committee has requested nineteen times to conference with the House Budget Committee, since last April. Nineteen times. And has been blocked at every turn. Not by Harry Reid, as the Tea Party stalwarts would have you believe, but by the Tea Party itself, in the Senate.
1. 4/23 Senator Reid requested unanimous consent to go to conference, Senator Toomey blocked.
2. 5/6 Senator Reid requested unanimous consent to go to conference, Senator Cruz blocked.
3. 5/7 Senator Murray requested unanimous consent to go to conference, Senator McConnell blocked.
4. 5/8 Senator Warner asked unanimous consent to go to conference, Senator McConnell blocked.
5. 5/9 Senator Murray asked unanimous consent to go to conference, Senator McConnell blocked.
6. 5/14 Senator Warner asked unanimous consent to go to conference, and Senator McConnell blocked.
7. 5/15 Senator Wyden asked unanimous consent to go to conference, and Senator McConnell blocked.
8. 5/16 Senator Murray asked unanimous consent to go to conference, and Senator Lee blocked.
9. 5/21 Senator Murray asked unanimous consent to go to conference, and Senator Paul blocked.
10. 5/22 Senator Kaine asked unanimous consent to go to conference, and Senator Rubio blocked.
11. 5/23 Senator McCaskill asked unanimous consent to go to conference, and Senator Lee blocked.
12. 6/4 Senator Murray asked unanimous consent to go to conference, and Senator Rubio blocked.
13. 6/12 Senator Kaine asked unanimous consent to go to conference, and Senator Lee blocked.
14. 6/19 Senator Murray asked unanimous consent to go to conference, and Senator Toomey blocked.
15. 6/26 Senator Murray requested unanimous consent to go to conference, Senator Cruz blocked.
16. 7/11 Senator Murray requested unanimous consent to go to conference, Senator Marco Rubio blocked.
17. 7/17 Senator Murray requested unanimous consent to go to conference, Senator Mike Lee blocked.
18. 8/1 Senator Durbin requested unanimous consent to go to conference, Senator Marco Rubio blocked.
19. 10/2 Senator Murray requested unanimous consent to go to conference, Senator Toomey blocked.
(Seitz-Wald, 2013)
Because, in case you flunked Civics 101, the House does not do the budget on it’s own.
The way this works is that the President does his budget, more of a wish list on what he would like to see funded, and hands it down to the Congress. They look at it and each Budget Committee hammers out what they figure they can do, based on how much they think is coming in. Then they go to committee together, the House and the Senate Budget Committees, and come to a consensus. Each presents that budget to their respective groups and it is voted on, passed (or not, in which case it’s back to the drawing board…) and if it’s passed it goes back the President for his signature. And VIOLA! We have a budget!
The President has presented a budget every year since 2009 (for FY 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013). The Senate has had a budget ready every year since 2009 (for FY 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013) and the House has had the same budget for the last four years, Paul Ryan’s budget, which he can’t seem to explain, without getting too “wonky” on us.
But we can’t seem to get these into committee. So, we have no budget. This is not on the President; he just doesn’t have that kind of power. This is on the Senate and on the House. And on the forty-nine House members and five Senate members who make up the Tea Party Caucus. (Wikipeadia)
House Tea Party Caucus
• Michele Bachmann, Minnesota, Chair
• Joe Barton, Texas
• Gus Bilirakis, Florida
• Rob Bishop, Utah
• Diane Black, Tennessee
• Michael C. Burgess, Texas
• Paul Broun, Georgia
• John Carter, Texas
• Bill Cassidy, Louisiana
• Howard Coble, North Carolina
• Ander Crenshaw, Florida
• John Culberson, Texas
• Jeff Duncan, South Carolina
• Blake Farenthold, Texas
• Stephen Fincher, Tennessee
• John Fleming, Louisiana
• Trent Franks, Arizona
• Phil Gingrey, Georgia
• Louie Gohmert, Texas
• Vicky Hartzler, Missouri
• Tim Huelskamp, Kansas
• Lynn Jenkins, Kansas
• Steve King, Iowa
• Doug Lamborn, Colorado
• Blaine Luetkemeyer, Missouri
• Cynthia Lummis, Wyoming
• Kenny Marchant, Texas
• Tom McClintock, California
• David McKinley, West Virginia
• Gary Miller, California
• Mick Mulvaney, South Carolina
• Randy Neugebauer, Texas
• Rich Nugent, Florida
• Steven Palazzo, Mississippi
• Steve Pearce, New Mexico
• Ted Poe, Texas
• Tom Price, Georgia
• Phil Roe, Tennessee
• Dennis A. Ross, Florida
• Ed Royce, California
• Steve Scalise, Louisiana
• Pete Sessions, Texas
• Adrian Smith, Nebraska
• Lamar S. Smith, Texas
• Tim Walberg, Michigan
• Lynn Westmoreland, Georgia
• Joe Wilson, South Carolina
Senate Tea Party Caucus
• Mike Lee (Utah)[5]
• Jerry Moran (Kansas)
• Rand Paul (Kentucky)[5]
• Tim Scott (South Carolina)
• Ted Cruz (Texas)
This is not something to be proud of. We have become the laughing stock of the world. We, who once, rebuilt the world, after World War I and II, Who brought the world the cures for small pox, measles, rubella and once insisted that medical research should be unfettered and was important, and created places like the Mayo Clinic and the National Institutes of Health. We are the country that will create economic havoc through out the world when our economy crashes in nine days, because we default on our debt, because of the actions of fifty-four people, for whom the election in 2012 didn’t go their way, and they can’t manage to get the votes to overturn one piece of legislation that they don’t care for.
They call the rest of us un-American.
Works Cited
National Intitutes of Health. (2013, June 3). Retrieved October 8, 2013, from Fact sheet: Impact of Sequestration on the National Institutes of Health:
http://www.nih.gov/news/health/jun2013/nih-03.htmSeitz-Wald, A. (2013, October 7). 19 Times Democrats Tried to Negotiate With Republicans. Retrieved October 8, 2013, from National Journal:
http://www.nationaljournal.com/congress ... d=mostreadWikipeadia. (n.d.). Tea Party Caucus. Retrieved October 8, 2013, from Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_Party_Caucus