21st Century Wire says…
Get
ready for a flood of mud-slinging in Washington over the next ten days,
as President Obama and Nancy Pelosi fight to preserve a political
legacy currently crumbling.
As the last few weeks have
proved, Obama and his GOP friend John McCain firmly believe there is
plenty of money for sending weapons to terrorist groups fighting Syria.
This type of excess will naturally come back to haunt Obama in
particular. On the heels of diplomatic humiliation over the Syria
debacle, it seems that things are not getting any easier for the
embattled Commander-and-Chief this week.
Obama’s latest outburst accusing Congress of “trying to mess with me”, and using the term “deadbeat nation” three times in his speech – marks another low-point in White House history, perhaps a product of extreme political narcissism.
It
seems that the federal government machine is running out of money to
build its top-down command-and-control pyramid in America…
This just in from the Washington Post:
The
House passed a short-term spending plan Friday morning that would
continue funding government operations through mid-December and withhold
funding for President Obama’s signature health-care law, the opening
salvo in what promises to be a contentious 10 days of debate on Capitol Hill over extending government operations by only three months.
The
legislation would fund federal agencies at an annualized rate of more
than $986 billion but would also leave in place automatic spending cuts
known as sequestration, set to take effect in January. It would include
language to prohibit any funding going to implementing the health-care
law and, additionally, authorize the Treasury to pay some bills and not
others in the event that no deal is reached in October on increasing the
debt limit…
Lori Montgomery and Philip Rucker
Washington Post
House
Republicans rallied behind their right wing Friday to launch a
full-scale assault on President Obama’s health-care initiative, setting
up a protracted confrontation with Democrats that risks shutting down
the government in just 10 days.
On
a vote of 230 to 189, the House approved and sent to the Senate a plan
to fund federal agencies past Sept. 30, but also to strip funding from
the Affordable Care Act, the president’s most significant legislative
achievement.
“We had a victory today for the American people, and
frankly, we also had a victory for common sense,” Speaker John A.
Boehner (R-Ohio) said, surrounded by more than 200 cheering lawmakers at
a news conference at the Capitol.
“Our message to the United
States Senate is real simple: The American people don’t want the
government shut down and they don’t want Obamacare.”
Friday’s vote
was Step One in the GOP crusade to undermine the health law. Step Two
comes next week, when House leaders hope to advance a separate measure that
will demand a one-year delay in the law’s implementation in exchange
for an agreement to avoid a first-ever default on the nation’s debts
sometime next month.
Obama responded with an uncharacteristically angry speech in which he accused Republicans of “trying to mess with me” and “holding the economy hostage.”
“They’re
focused on politics. They’re focused on trying to mess with me. They’re
not focused on you,” he told a friendly crowd of about 1,000
autoworkers and their families at a truck manufacturing plant on the
outskirts of Kansas City, Mo.
Three times, Obama used the phrase “deadbeat nation” to condemn Republican brinkmanship on the debt limit…
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