Boehner played chicken and flinched.
NO defunding of Planned Parenthood.
NO reigning in of the EPA.
NO defunding of Obamacare.
ONLY $38 billion in cuts. That's equal to the American cost of only 19 days in Libya.
$500 billion over ten years.
TEN YEARS.
AT THAT RATE IT WILL TAKE 50 YEARS TO ERASE OUR CURRENT DEFICIT.
50 FUCKING YEARS!
The chickenshits were afraid of what may happen in 2012. And now the Dems know this and will play it every time they want to railroad something else through.
They learned NOTHING from November.
So find out who voted for this fiasco, whether Republican, Tea Party Republican or Democrat. Write to them if they are your Washington Whore --er -- Congressman and be sure to tell them you will work to
VOTE OUT EVERY ONE OF THESE POLITICAL PUSSIES IN 2012.
Fox:
Congress Strikes a Budget Deal to Avert Shutdown, Cutting $38.5B
Congressional leaders, with barely an hour to go before a federal government, announced late Friday night they had reached a deal to fund the government through the end of the fiscal year.
The deal includes $38.5 billion in spending cuts while leaving the more contention policy matters, such as blocking funding for Planned Parenthood, for a later debate.
"This agreement between Democrats and Republicans on behalf of all Americas is a budget that invests in our future while making the largest spending cut in our history," President Obama said in a short speech to the nation after the deal had been announced.
House Speaker John Boehner, speaking to reporters just before Obama's remarks, said lawmakers would pass one last short-term spending resolution Friday night to buy lawmakers the time needed to prepare and pass the final budget bill next week.
"We fought to keep government spending down because it really will be a jobs creator for our country," Boehner said.
Of the $38.5 billion in spending cuts to Obama's original 2011 budget proposal, the short-term stopgap measure contains the first $2 billion and the final budget bill will cut the other $36.5 billion.
It was a remarkable end to a roller-coaster week of negotiations, in which the government several times seemed headed for a shutdown because the two sides couldn't agree on a full-year deal.
Obama has already signed two temporary spending bills, which included a total of $10 billion in spending cuts, but he said this week he wasn't interested in any more short-term fixes.
As late as hours before the agreement, a government shutdown seemed quite possible -- if not inevitable -- as both sides couldn't even agree, at least in public, on what was holding up a deal.
Democrats said Republicans were pushing for social policy measure, while Republicans said the Democrats hadn't agreed to enough spending cuts.
But in the end, neither side wanted a shutdown that would risk the economic recovery and their political future.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid called the agreement "historic."
"Both sides have made tough choices, but tough choices is what this job is all about," Reid said.
The Senate passed the short-term spending measure Friday night by a voice vote. The House passed the bill early Saturday.
The government's current fiscal year began back in October, but Democrats last year, facing stiff opposition from Republicans, put off a vote on a full-year budget as both parties geared up for the midterm elections. The standoff began in earnest several weeks ago, when the new
Republican majority in the House passed legislation that would fund the government for the rest of the year, but with $61 billion in cuts and numerous curbs on the government that Democrats objected to.
In the weeks since, the two sides have alternately negotiated on a budget for the rest of the year and taken time out to pass interim measures to buy themselves more time.
Republicans originally wanted to ban federal funds for Planned Parenthood, a health care services provider that is also the nation's largest provider of abortions.
Federal funds may not be used to pay for abortions except in strictly regulated cases, but supporters of the ban said cutting off government funds for the organization -- currently about $330 million a year -- would make it harder for it to use its own money for the same purpose.
Democrats rejected the proposal in private talks. Officials in both parties said Republicans returned earlier in the week with a proposal to distribute federal funds for family planning and related health services to the states, rather than directly to Planned Parenthood and other organizations.
Democrats said they rejected that proposal as well, and Obama had vowed to veto a bill that the House passed Tuesday to fund then refused to agree to allow a separate Senate vote on the issue as part of debate over any compromise bill.
6 comments:
One bright spot in this deal:
The spending cuts amount to $78.5 billion below what Mr. Obama had requested for 2011.
I see no way for BHO to declare victory in this compromise on the budget.
In my view, the budget realities are absolutely hideous.
For Christ's sake.
Pastorius,
It's the same old political crap.
Candidates make all sorts of promises, get elected, and won't -- or can't -- follow through.
I'm not going to defend the GOP on this budget issue.
But I will say that the plan to cut $100 billion is one that would have resulted in Draconian cuts and losses at the ballot box in 2012. If such a budget would even have passed in the Senate.
As I see it, there was no way for Congress to pass a somewhat fiscally-sound budget and force Obama's veto or approval, the veto putting BHO in the loss column if a government shutdown ensued.
Draconian cuts, which would affect every single American, just aren't going to happen. Once entitlements are dished out, how can you take them away or even rein them in?
Addendum: There's a lobby group, sometimes several lobby groups, for every sticking point in the budget.
Well, happily Michelle Bachmann didn't flinch
There is no escape.
SEE YOU IN THE GULCH
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