Go to Admin » Appearance » Widgets » and move Gabfire Widget: Social into that MastheadOverlay zone
After Telling the Senate and Obama to Lead, House GOP Refuses to Support Fiscal Cliff Bill
House Republicans demanded that Obama and the Senate lead on the fiscal cliff, but are now objecting to passing the agreement that came out of their leadership.
The day after Christmas the House Republican leadership (Boehner, Cantor, McCarthy, and McMorris Rogers put out a statement telling the Senate to take action, “The House has acted on two bills which collectively would avert the entire fiscal cliff if enacted. Those bills await action by the Senate. If the Senate will not approve and send them to the president to be signed into law in their current form, they must be amended and returned to the House. Once this has occurred, the House will then consider whether to accept the bills as amended, or to send them back to the Senate with additional amendments. The House will take this action on whatever the Senate can pass, but the Senate first must act. The lines of communication remain open, and we will continue to work with our colleagues to avert the largest tax hike in American history, and to address the underlying problem, which is spending.”
On Sunday, Speaker Boehner called on the Senate and President Obama to lead, “The House has passed legislation to avert the entire fiscal cliff, and the president has never called for the Senate to act on those bills in any way. He instead has simply allowed the Democratic-controlled Senate to sit on them and lead our economy to the edge of the fiscal cliff. I am pleased Senators from both parties are currently working to find a bipartisan solution that can finally pass that chamber. That is the type of leadership America needs, not what they saw from the president this morning.”
Yesterday, Senate and the Obama administration came together to negotiate and overwhelmingly pass an agreement to avoid the fiscal cliff.
How did House Republicans respond to the leadership that they demanded from the Senate and the White House?
By refusing to support the agreement.
After the first Republican conference meeting of the day, Majority Leader Eric Cantor told reporters, “I do not support the bill.” Speaker Boehner said that his entire caucus is concerned about the lack of spending cuts in the deal, without mentioning the fact that there aren’t any spending cuts in deal because he walked on negotiations with President Obama.
When Republicans killed Boehner’s own Plan B, they cut themselves out of the negotiating process. Boehner admitted his impotency as speaker when he told the Senate and the White House to lead. Now, House Republicans don’t like the deal that Senate Republicans negotiated, so they are trying to kill it.
The only reason that vote hasn’t been held on the fiscal cliff bill in the House is because Boehner doesn’t have a majority of his caucus on board with bringing it to the floor. Speaker Boehner’s unwillingness to take a position on the bill suggests that he is not about to try to pass the legislation with only a handful of Republicans and majority of Democratic support. The right wing has been freaking out all day over the thought that Boehner might violate the Hastert Rule (a majority of the majority is required to bring a bill up for a vote), but so far the Speaker’s inaction is a big hint that he will go whichever way the majority of his caucus wants.
The Senate is gone, so if the House does anything other than pass the bill, the agreement is dead.
None of this should be surprising to anyone who has followed circus of dysfunction that has ran the House since Republicans took back the majority. With his speakership on the line, it is highly unlikely that Boehner will bring the fiscal cliff bill to the floor for a vote without agreement from a majority of his caucus.
No matter what House Republicans may say, the problem isn’t presidential or senate leadership. The problem begins and ends with the Republicans who are controlling the House.
House Republicans are again failing America, and with their ideological obstruction, may be sowing the seeds for the destruction of the Republican Party.
Several times a day I find myself feeling sorry for John Boehner. The man really did try. But now this ...
Cowardly House Republicans will shove America off the fiscal cliff because they are afraid of voting for ...
By sabotaging their own vote on Plan B, House Republicans blew up John Boehner's attempt to provide them ...
Somebody better keep John Boehner away from the eggnog, as the House Speaker desperately tried to blame ...
The House managed to reelect John Boehner, but not without a bit of drama as Eric Cantor got votes for s ...
RMuse
Jan. 1st, 2013 at 6:24 pm
No-one with half-a-brain should be surprised. Inaction is the House Republicans’ forte, and despite the consequences to America, they’re doing what they do best…nothing.
Reynardine
Jan. 1st, 2013 at 6:54 pm
If *nothing* was what the House did, we would be infinitely better off than with what they *do*
djchefron
Jan. 1st, 2013 at 6:27 pm
Looks like for the New Year we have the makings of a good old fashion coup.Brought to you by Eric the quisling Cantor.If this mess wasn’t so tragic for the country Mel Brooks couldn’t have written a better comedy.SMDH
AdmC
Jan. 1st, 2013 at 6:45 pm
The right wing has been freaking out all day over the thought that Boehner might violate the Hastert Rule
(a majority of the majority is required to bring a bill up for a vote,
a totally undemocratic and totally un-American way of running the House which is supposed to be the “Peoples’ House” where any member in good standing can place an issue on the floor as they each represent Americans in a district who are to be heard)
savageDOG
Jan. 1st, 2013 at 7:41 pm
i am so curious about when those vocal patriots on 2nd Amendment issues will lock and load on this house that have become tyrants over Americans. i know, this sounds a bit extreme, but hey, it’s what they do.
think about it though, just whisper the idea to those idiots, then light up a string of firecrackers the next time they meet. there will be something done, even if it’s only in their coward-ass pants.
savageDOG
Jan. 1st, 2013 at 7:46 pm
sorry, after re-reading i wasn’t clear on my “they”s,
2nd Amendment patriots being extreme; and “those idiots” being house Republicans
djchefron
Jan. 1st, 2013 at 8:15 pm
They’re not patriots.Since the founding of this country there has been a stain of faux patriots.These are the same people who declared war on the United States in 1861.These are the same people who claim states rights to practice jim crow.These are the same people who fought like hell to count Africans as 3/5 of a human being for electorl reasons but refused to count them when it came to paying taxes.They Are traitors,their fathers were traitors and their grandfathers were traitors.Call them traitors but never patriots.
Shiva (Moderator)
Jan. 1st, 2013 at 8:30 pm
If they want to call themselves Patriots, let them ask themselves if they measure up to G Washington. If they say yes then let them call themselves whatever they want