The Republican-dominated House of Representatives remains unable
to agree even to a way forward toward funding the United States government.
This is a five-alarm fire.
The continuing resolution for funding the government Congress
passed in September when then–House speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) couldn’t pass
appropriations bills runs out on November
17. If something is not done, and done quickly, the
U.S. will face a shutdown over Thanksgiving. This will not only affect family
gatherings and the holiday, it will hit Black Friday—which, as the busiest shopping day of the year, is
what keeps a number of businesses afloat.
The problem with funding the government is the same problem that
infects much else in the country today:
far-right Republicans insist that their position is the only acceptable one.
Even though the majority of the country opposes their view, they refuse to
compromise. They want to gut the government that regulates business, provides a
basic social safety net, promotes infrastructure, and protects civil
rights.
To impose their will on the majority, they don’t have to
understand issues, build coalitions, or figure out compromises. All they have
to do is steadfastly vote no. If they can prevent the government from
accomplishing anything, they will have achieved their goal.
Senator Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) perfectly illustrated how much
easier it is to destroy than to build today as he objected to the promotion of military
leaders, one at a time. Democrats tried to bring up each promotion of career
military personnel, many of whom have served this country for decades, by
introducing them by name; Tuberville had only to say “I object” to prevent the
Senate from taking up those promotions.
That refusal to budge from an extreme position weakens our
military. It also weakens our democracy, as was apparent today in Michigan as Republican lawmakers joined an
antiabortion group in suing to overturn a 2022 amendment to the state
constitution protecting abortion rights.
Voters approved that amendment with 57% of the vote in a process
established by the state constitution, but the plaintiffs want to stop it from
taking effect, claiming that by creating a new right, it disfranchises them and
prevents the legislature from making laws. They could launch their own ballot
initiative to replace the amendment they don’t like, but as that seems unlikely
to pass, they are instead trying to block the measure the voters have said they
want.
The decision of Ohio’s voters to protect abortion rights on Tuesday has prompted a similar disdain for democracy
there. The vote for that state constitutional amendment was not close—56.6% to
43.4%—but Republican legislators immediately said they would work to find ways
to stop the amendment from taking effect.
North Dakota state representative Brandon Prichard was much more
explicit. Opposed to the measure, he wrote, “Direct democracy should not
exist…. It would be an act of courage to ignore the results of the election….”
According to James Bickerton of Newsweek, Prichard has previously called for
Republican-dominated states to “put into code that Jesus Christ is King and
dedicate their state to Him.”
Now that refusal to compromise threatens the U.S. government
itself. It has been apparent that the Republicans were unable to agree on a
funding plan even among themselves. On Tuesday, as Nicole Lafond of Talking
Points Memo pointed out, House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA)
said Americans should just trust the Republicans.
He told reporters: “I’m not going to tell you when we will bring
[appropriations bills] to the floor, but it will be in time, how about that?
Trust us: We’re working through the process in a way that I think that people
will be proud of…. [M]any options…are on the table and we’ll be revealing what
our plan is in short order.”
Today,
although the House managed to vote on a series of extremist bills designed to
signal to their base—lowering the salaries of government officials they dislike
to $1 a year—the House Republicans had to pull the Financial Services and
General Government appropriations bill after extremists loaded it with
antiabortion language so they could not get the votes to pass it even through
the Republican side of the aisle; earlier they had to pull the bill to fund
Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and related agencies.
“We’re still dealing with the same divisions we always have
had,” a House Republican told Sahil Kapur, Scott Wong, and Julie Tsirkin of NBC
News. “We’re ungovernable.”
And then, after pulling the bill, Speaker Johnson adjourned the
House until Monday.
As Representative Abigail Spanberger (D-VA) put it this afternoon: “We are just
8 days away from a devastating government shutdown—and instead of working in a
bipartisan way to keep the government open, Speaker Johnson sent Congress home
early for the weekend. This is completely unacceptable.”
Representative Ted Lieu (D-CA) wrote: “The training wheels fell
off for [Republican] leadership this week. They tried to pass two
appropriations bills. They failed twice. The government shuts down in 8 days and [the
House Republican Party] HAS NO PLAN. Instead, we voted on stupid stuff today like reducing the salary of [the] W[hite]
H[ouse] Press Secretary to $1.”
The problem remains what it has been since the Republican Party
took control of the House in 2021: far-right extremists refuse to agree to any
budget that doesn’t slash government funding of popular programs, while less
extremist Republicans recognize that such cuts would gut the government and
horrify all but the most extreme voters. In any case, measures loaded with
extremist wish lists will not pass the Senate; this is why appropriations bills
are traditionally kept clean.
Former House speaker Kevin McCarthy hammered out just such an
agreement with the administration in May 2023 for funding, but the extremists refuse to
honor it. For their part, Democrats are holding firm on that agreement. House
minority leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) told NBC News correspondent Julie
Tsirkin that “[a] clean continuing resolution at the fiscal year 2023 levels is
the only way forward… We're asking for the status quo to keep the government
open.”
The government budget isn’t the only casualty of the Republican
chaos. The farm bill, which funds agricultural programs and food programs, must
be renewed every five years. The measure authorized in 2018 expires this year,
but extremists are eager to slash funding for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program (SNAP) benefits, formerly known as food stamps, endangering the passage
of a measure farmers strongly support.
And today the
Defense Department pleaded with Congress to pass the supplemental budget
request President Biden made in August to fund Ukraine’s military needs in its
war against Russian aggression.
The Republican Party’s problem continues to be America’s
problem, and it is getting bigger by the day.
—Heather Cox Richardson
Notes:
https://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2023/11/08/Michigan-GOP-abortion-rights-suit/2071699472193/
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Q4KDFNzLw7fH5DO9ZN786TyonscsMW4o/view
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/where-things-stand/trust-us-as-we-lead-you-off-a-cliff
https://www.newsweek.com/republican-pushes-overturn-ohio-election-result-1842226
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/11/09/johnson-house-gop-snap-00126341
Twitter (X):
therecount/status/1722717302938890513
RepSpanberger/status/1722688517216583958
timkaine/status/1722702602738008235
sahilkapur/status/1722644384829595972
tedlieu/status/1722649806835794055
JulieNBCNews/status/1722629165709656206
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