Reuters
By Richard Cowen and Susan Cornwall
December 4, 2014
Conservative
Republicans on Wednesday resisted a plan to avert a budget fight over
President Barack Obama's immigration order, raising the likelihood that
the spending struggle in Congress
could last right up to the Dec. 11 deadline for a government shutdown.
Tea
Party lawmakers stood firm against House of Representatives Speaker
John Boehner's plan to pass a spending bill keeping most of the
government running through September 2015 and postponing
the battle over immigration until early next year, when Republicans
take control of the Senate and expand their House majority.
That
opposition could force Boehner once again to seek Democratic support to
pass his spending proposal and avert a shutdown after the government's
spending authority expires. Republican leaders
are desperate to avoid that after a 16-day shutdown a year ago
inflicted heavy political damage on the party.
The
small but unruly band of conservatives, who have been a persistent
headache for Boehner and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, said
there was no reason to wait until next year to
try to deny funding for Obama's order.
"Congress
should stand up and use the power of the purse," said Republican
Senator Ted Cruz of Texas. He and others argue that Obama's announcement
last month that he was using executive powers
to ease the threat of deportation for up to 4.7 million undocumented
immigrants amounts to an illegal amnesty.
"We
will not allocate taxpayers money to lawless and illegal amnesties," he
said outside the Capitol, where a small crowd of Tea Party backers
waving U.S. and Revolutionary War-era "Don't
Tread on Me" flags offered support.
A
ringleader of the House resistance, Representative Steve King of Iowa,
estimated a core group of 20 to 50 Republican House members supported
the effort to use the must-pass government spending
bill as leverage in the immigration fight.
But
Boehner has used Democrats to pass spending bills during previous
showdowns, including the shutdown last year, and many conservatives
acknowledged they were fighting an uphill battle.
"There’s
likely to be Democratic support for it, which means they could pass it
without us," said conservative Representative John Fleming, a Louisiana
Republican.
A
bill to keep the government operating beyond Dec. 11 likely will not
emerge in the House until Monday at the earliest, a senior House
Republican aide said, meaning floor debate and a vote
on passage would not come until Wednesday or Thursday, the deadline
day.
McConnell
endorsed Boehner's proposal to pass a full year of funding for most
government agencies but give only a short-term extension to the
Department of Homeland Security, which will implement
the immigration order.
That
would give Republicans a chance to revisit funding for the plan next
year when they will take control of both chambers of Congress after
November's midterm elections.
"I
think that's a pretty responsible way to go forward. It doesn't shut
anything down but also doesn't give the Department of Homeland Security a
full year's funding and guarantees a kind
of ongoing discussion about this whole issue," McConnell said on the
Sirius radio program "Yahoo News on POTUS."
McConnell
repeated his vow to avoid a shutdown, which he warned would rattle
economic markets. The Dow and S&P 500 stock indexes dipped around 5
percent during last year's shutdown, which
was accompanied by a dispute over the country's debt ceiling, but
rebounded afterward. U.S. economic growth slowed slightly because of
spending cuts.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment