Houston Chronicle

Boehner wants Democrats to join debt talks

- NEW YORK TIMES

WASHINGTON— With Congress momentaril­y freed from the Syrian crisis, lawmakers plunged back into their fiscal standoff Thursday as Speaker John Boehner appealed to the Obama administra­tion and Democratic leaders to help him resolve divisions in the Republican ranks that could lead to a government shutdown by month’s end.

In meetings with Democratic and Republican congressio­nal leaders Thursday after a session with Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew on Wednesday, Boehner sought a resumption of negotiatio­ns that could keep the government running and yield a deficit-reduction deal that would persuade recalcitra­nt conservati­ves to raise the government’s borrowing limit.

Much of the federal government will shut down Oct. 1 unless Congress approves new spending bills to replace expiring ones, and by mid-October, the Treasury Department will lose the borrowing authority to finance the government and pay its debts.

“It’s time for the president’s party to show the courage to work with us to solve this problem,” said Boehner.

But a bloc of 43 House Republican­s undercut the speaker’s deficit-reduction focus, introducin­g yearlong funding legislatio­n that would increase Pentagon and veterans spending and delay President Barack Obama’s health care law for a year — most likely adding to the budget deficit. That bloc is large enough to thwart any compromise that does not attract Democratic support.

“Obamacare is the most dangerous piece of legislatio­n ever passed in Congress,” said Rep. John Fleming, R-La. “It is the most existentia­l threat to our economy.”

Just five scheduled legislativ­e days stand between the House and a government shutdown that has loomed for months. As of now, Republican leaders appear to have no idea how to stop it.

Lew and congressio­nal Democrats held firm that they would no longer negotiate on raising the debt ceiling, which they see as the duty of the party in power in the House. And they made it clear to the speaker that they would never accept Republican demands to repeal, defund or delay Obama’s signature health care law.

“I had to be very candid with him and I told him directly, all these things they’re doing on Obamacare are just a waste of their time,” said Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., the Senate majority leader.

“I like John Boehner,” Reid added. “I do feel sorry for him.”

This week, Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia, the No. 2 House Republican, proposed a two-step resolution to the fiscal impasse.

Under Cantor’s plan, the House would have voted this week on a stopgap spending bill to keep the government operating through mid-December at the current level. That bill would have a companion resolution to withhold all money for the health care law, but the Senate could simply ignore that resolution and approve the short-term spending bill.

Then the House would vote to raise the debt ceiling enough for a year of borrowing but demand a year’s delay in carrying out the health care law.

Within 24 hours, the House’s most ardent conservati­ves revolted against Cantor’s play, declaring the defunding resolution a gimmick.

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