The US government is hours away from a partial shutdown, its first in
nearly two decades, with Republican and Democratic lawmakers trading
blame over who is responsible.
Congress was closed on Sunday after an early-morning vote in the
Republican-run House of Representatives to delay key parts of President
Barack Obama’s healthcare law.
Republicans have refused to pass a budget unless Democrats agree to the concessions.
The Senate is slated to convene on Monday afternoon, just hours
before the shutdown deadline at midnight, and majority leader Harry Reid
has already promised that Democrats will kill the House’s latest
proposal.
Barring any last-minute action, about 800,000 federal workers 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, the American pension scheme, will continue to pay
out benefits, and the Medicare and Medicaid healthcare programmes will
continue to function as well.
The latest fiscal fight underscored the deep divide between the
Republicans and the Obama administration and its Democratic allies.
Republicans insisted the healthcare law was costing jobs and driving up healthcare costs.
Obama has said he will not let the law, his chief domestic
achievement, be gutted; Democrats say Republicans are obsessed with
attacking the overhaul, which is aimed at providing health coverage for
millions of uninsured Americans.
Rehearsing arguments
Since the last government shutdown 17 years ago, temporary funding
bills known as continuing resolutions have been uncontroversial.
But with exchanges set to open on Tuesday where people could shop for
healthcare coverage from private insurers, lawmakers from the
Republicans’ ultraconservative tea-party wing are willing to take the
risk in their drive to kill the healthcare law.
The action in Washington on Sunday was limited mainly to TV talk
shows and barrages of press releases, as Democrats and Republicans
rehearsed arguments for blaming each other if the government in fact
closes its doors at midnight Monday.
“You’re going to shut down the government if you can’t prevent
millions of Americans from getting affordable care,” said Democratic
Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland.
“If the Senate stalls until Monday afternoon instead of working
today, it would be an act of breathtaking arrogance by the Senate
Democratic leadership,” said House Speaker John Boehner. “They will be
deliberately bringing the nation to the brink of a government shutdown.”
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