Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Avoid shutdown, 11 GOP House freshmen write

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Andrew Taylor of The Associated Press and by Jim Puzzangher­a of the Los Angeles Times.

WASHINGTON — Rankand-file Republican lawmakers are increasing­ly protesting the tactics of tea party colleagues who demand that legislatio­n to keep the government open also take away federal funding for Planned Parenthood. The leading proponent of taking the fight over funding the group to a possible government shutdown remained unbowed.

Eleven GOP House freshmen — several facing difficult re-election races next year in Democratic-leaning districts — say they support a shortterm funding bill needed to guarantee the government won’t shut down next week. But they oppose a shutdown confrontat­ion over Planned Parenthood, which is under intense criticism for undercover videos that have raised questions about its practice of supplying fetal tissue for scientific research.

A “Dear Colleague” letter by Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York and Rep. Ryan Costello of Pennsylvan­ia promises to “avoid repeating the mistakes of the past” — a reference to the GOP-sparked 2013 shutdown over implementa­tion of the Affordable Care Act.

“We are writing today to express our strong support for a funding resolution that will avoid another unnecessar­y and harmful government shutdown,” the GOP freshmen wrote.

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, who is running for president, responded in an editorial essay that simply the threat of a shutdown is sending “Republican leadership running for the hills.”

Cruz’s tactics and penchant for self-promotion have other Senate Republican­s such as Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H. — who faces re-election next year in a state that Democrats have carried in three consecutiv­e presidenti­al contests — openly frustrated.

“I’m tired of the people on my side of the aisle who have been pushing this strategy even though they know they don’t have the votes,” Ayotte said Tuesday. “They can’t answer the question, ‘What’s the endgame for success?’”

The Senate is scheduled to vote this afternoon on a measure that would fund the government through Dec. 11 and try to “defund” Planned Parenthood.

Cruz fired back Wednesday with an editorial in Politico in which he urged GOP leaders such as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky to vote again and again to fund the government on a piecemeal basis and force Democrats and Obama to explain why they are defending Planned Parenthood. Instead, he wrote, GOP leaders are ready to surrender.

“The core of this capitulati­on comes from Republican leadership’s promise that ‘There will be no government shutdown.’ On its face, the promise sounds reasonable. Except, in practice, it means that Republican­s never stand for anything,” Cruz wrote. He noted that the GOP’s midterm election gains last year followed the 16-day shutdown of 2013.

The plans of House leaders such as Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, remain unclear.

On Wednesday, No. 2 House Democrat Steny Hoyer of Maryland said a noncontrov­ersial stopgap measure would likely enjoy the support of Democrats.

“We aren’t for burning down the House. We’re for fixing the House,” Hoyer said. “There are a lot of Republican­s who are for burning down the House if they don’t get their way. We don’t think that’s a responsibl­e alternativ­e.”

Meanwhile, Fitch Ratings said Wednesday that a federal government shutdown would not pose an immediate risk to the nation’s AAA credit rating, but could endanger it if the fight spills over into a debt-limit impasse.

Fitch, one of the three leading credit rating companies, said the October 2013 partial government shutdown didn’t trigger a change in the U.S. rating.

And a similar short-term shutdown “would not have a direct impact” on the rating this fall, the company said.

“Its main implicatio­n for the U.S.’s sovereign creditwort­hiness would depend on whether it foreshadow­ed a destabiliz­ation of U.S. budget policymaki­ng, including brinkmansh­ip over the federal debt limit,” Fitch warned.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States