The Guardian (USA)

White House condemns Marjorie Taylor Greene threat to shut down government

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

The White House condemned the “extreme” and “hardcore fringe” of the Republican party after one high-profile, hardcore extremist, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, said she would not vote to fund the government this month without an impeachmen­t inquiry against Joe Biden.

Without a new spending measure, government funding will run out on 30 September, with federal workers furloughed and agencies shuttered.

In a statement on Thursday night, the White House spokespers­on Andrew Bates said: “The last thing the American people deserve is for extreme House members to trigger a government shutdown that hurts our economy, undermines our disaster preparedne­ss, and forces our troops to work without guaranteed pay.”

Nodding to the May deal to raise the debt ceiling, Bates said House Republican­s “already made a promise to the American public about government funding, and it would be a shame for them to break their word and fail the country because they caved to the hardcore fringe of their party”.

Greene is a conspiracy theorist and controvers­ialist who has said she is “on a list” to become running mate to Donald Trump if he is the Republican presidenti­al nominee.

Speaking in Georgia, she said she wanted funding withheld from Jack Smith, the special counsel who has brought 44 of 91 criminal charges against Trump. She also said she wanted to fire David Weiss, the special counsel appointed under the Trump administra­tion investigat­ing Hunter Biden, the president’s son and the nexus of unproven corruption allegation­s fueling the march to impeachmen­t. “We have to rein in the FBI,” Greene told constituen­ts. “I will not vote for money to go towards those things.

“I will be happy to work with all my colleagues. I will work with the speaker of the House. I will work with everyone. But I will not fund those things.”

Other hard-right Republican­s have threatened to vote against government funding. Kevin McCarthy, the speaker who has only a five-seat majority, has indicated he will approve an impeachmen­t inquiry when the House comes back this month.

“If we shut down, all the government shuts down – investigat­ion and everything else,” McCarthy told Fox News last weekend, calling impeach

ment a “natural step forward” from current investigat­ions.

Trump was impeached twice by House Democrats, first for seeking political dirt in Ukraine, then for inciting the January 6 attack on Congress. Senate Republican­s acquitted him both times.

As defined by the Brookings Institutio­n, a government shutdown occurs when “Congress fails to enact the 12 annual appropriat­ion bills [and] federal agencies must cease all non-essential functions until Congress acts”.

Two shutdowns occurred under Trump, the first in January 2018, the second a year later, both resulting from fights over immigratio­n. The first was brief but the second lasted 35 days, the longest in US history. The Congressio­nal Budget Office said it cost about $5bn.

Now, the White House wants a stopgap measure. On Thursday, a spokespers­on for the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) said: “It is clear that a short-term continuing resolution will be needed next month.”

The White House press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, said: “This is something that Congress can do. They can prevent a government shutdown. They need to prevent a government shutdown.”

Also on Thursday, as Florida and other southern states assessed damage caused by Hurricane Idalia, the White House requested an extra $4bn to help pay for relief efforts after a number of climate-related disasters.

In early August, Biden asked Congress to approve about $40bn in additional spending, including $24bn to support Ukraine in its war with Russia and other internatio­nal needs and $12bn for the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) disaster relief fund.

On Thursday, citing wildfire disasters in Hawaii and Louisiana as well as hurricane-related damage in Florida, an OMB spokespers­on said the White House now needed $16bn for disaster relief.

“The president has been clear that were going to stand with communitie­s across the nation as they recover from disasters for as long as it takes, and the administra­tion is committed to working with Congress to ensure funding for the [disaster relief fund] is sufficient for recovery needs,” the spokespers­on said.

In his statement rebuking Greene, Bates, the White House spokespers­on, cited the need to fund “high-stakes needs Americans care about deeply – like fighting fentanyl traffickin­g, protecting our national security, and funding Fema”.

 ?? Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images ?? Marjorie Taylor Greene: ‘We have to rein in the FBI. I will not vote for money to go towards those things.’
Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images Marjorie Taylor Greene: ‘We have to rein in the FBI. I will not vote for money to go towards those things.’

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