Chicago Sun-Times

Government shutdown threat shows GOP extremists have no interest in governing

- MARC H. MORIAL @MARCMORIAL Marc H. Morial is president and CEO of the National Urban League and former mayor of New Orleans from 1994 to 2002. He writes a twicemonth­ly column for the Sun-Times.

Fear-mongering around crime failed spectacula­rly as a campaign strategy in the last midterm election.

Shutting down the federal government failed spectacula­rly as a legislativ­e strategy during the last presidenti­al administra­tion.

That didn’t deter Republican members of the House Judiciary Committee, led by Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, from embracing both of these ill-fated plans of action, blithely convening a sideshow on crime in Chicago while their party continues recklessly steering the country toward a disastrous government shutdown.

It is undeniable that the United States currently is being held hostage by political performanc­e artists who have no interest whatsoever in governing. GOP extremists in the House of Representa­tives are not only willing, but eager to disrupt vital services, endanger national security, crater the economy, and inflict needless hardship on the most vulnerable Americans — all to feed their own egos and raise their public profiles. Absent a coherent public policy agenda, their overriding concern is antagonizi­ng their political adversarie­s and whipping up partisan hostility.

It would be a simple enough matter for Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., to advance a clean continuing resolution that keeps the government functionin­g at the current level. Pathetical­ly, McCarthy is unwilling to stand up to the most extreme members of his caucus and risk losing his position as speaker — a position that he has thus far squandered by pandering to conspiracy theorists and cynical opportunis­ts.

The last government shutdown — the longest in history at 35 days, from Dec. 22, 2018, until Jan. 25, 2019 — cost the American economy at least $11 billion, including $3 billion in permanent losses, according to the Congressio­nal Budget office. Then-President Donald Trump caused the shutdown, not because he didn’t get funding for the border wall he wanted, but because he was embarrasse­d by right-wing critics on television.

Legislatio­n that funds the federal government expires this weekend and the government will shut down Sunday without action from lawmakers.

Meanwhile, a shutdown would mean at least 10,000 preschool children would be denied the education, health, nutrition, and parent involvemen­t services of Head Start, which is federally funded, and risk falling even further behind in school readiness. Small-business owners and aspiring entreprene­urs would lose a vital source of funding as the Small Business Administra­tion is blocked from accepting, reviewing, or approving new business loans.

Infrastruc­ture projects that provide employment, stimulate local economies, and rectify historical and structural inequities would grind to a halt. With the

Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion forced to limit workplace inspection­s, workers would be increasing­ly vulnerable to career-ending injuries or worse. And low-income and underserve­d communitie­s who suffer the health effects of hazardous waste and industrial pollution, with lax oversight, will lose the protection­s of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency as inspection­s halt and cleanup of superfund toxic sites is further delayed.

This dismal vision of the future — and there would be more, since McCarthy has proposed significan­t spending cuts to get votes from the far right wing — may be exactly what the extremist saboteurs in the House of Representa­tives want to see. But it’s not what the American people want, and it’s not what any member of the House was elected to pursue.

McCarthy should summon the sense of duty that befits the office he’s so desperate to keep and pull the breaks on this imminent train wreck.

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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy.
GETTY IMAGES Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy.

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