So, apparently, do the Republicans, or they wouldn't have picked this fight in the first place.TimothyC wrote:The Republcians in the House have voted to keep the Government open twice now, all Reid and Obama have to do is let the elements of the ACA that haven't gone into effect yet get pushed back another year. I guess President Barry considers the ACA more important than funding the government.
I don't think it's right to say "start altering this major legislation or we let the government shut down." Because a party willing to do that can milk it endlessly for concessions, which skews the relationship between the popular mandate of the government and its actual actions.
"You had 55% of the electorate calling for Bill X, but we are willing to shut down the government to stop Bill X" should not fully cancel each other out.
When was the last time? When were most of those times, have they been happening uniformly about every two years, or were there a whole lot of them during a single short period?Also, it's not the first time the Government has been shut down. Last week NPR covered that it's been shut down 17 times in the last 37 years.
Justice wrote:The House and Senate passed legislation that will not delay payments to uniformed military personnel, which Obama signed. Civilian contractors, however, are another story.The Romulan Republic wrote:Secondly, I recall Obama saying soldiers' pay will be delayed. They'll get their money in the end, but they better have some saved up and no big expenses until this is over.
Although it makes us take the shutdown less seriously, and I'm beginning to think this is a bad thing, seeing as how we've had a party with control of one house of Congress and not much else milking the "do this or else we'll stop the government from functioning" tactic for three years.The Romulan Republic wrote:Didn't know that. Glad to hear it.
It's really, really tiresome, and part of the reason they get away with it is because from a policy point of view they don't have to take the immediate consequences of the shutdown seriously.