WASHINGTON: The US government began a partial shutdown on
Tuesday for the first time in 17 years, potentially putting up to 1
million workers on unpaid leave, closing national parks and stalling
medical research projects.
Federal agencies were directed to cut back services after lawmakers
could not break a political stalemate that sparked new questions about
the ability of a deeply divided Congress to perform its most basic
functions.
After House Republicans floated a late offer to break the logjam,
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid rejected the idea, saying Democrats
would not enter into formal negotiations on spending “with a gun to our
head” in the form of government shutdowns.
The political dysfunction at the Capitol also raised fresh concerns
about whether Congress can meet a crucial mid-October deadline to raise
the government's $16.7 trillion debt ceiling.
With an eye on the 2014 congressional elections, both parties tried to deflect responsibility for the shutdown.
President Barack Obama accused Republicans of being too beholden to
Tea Party conservatives in the House of Representatives and said the
shutdown could threaten the economic recovery.
The political stakes are particularly high for Republicans, who are
trying to regain control of the Senate next year. Polls show they are
more likely to be blamed for the shutdown, as they were during the last
shutdown in 1996.
“Somebody is going to win and somebody is going to lose,” said
pollster Peter Brown of the Quinnipiac University poll. “Going in, Obama
and the Democrats have a little edge.”
The dollar held steady on Tuesday even though much of the U.S.
government was due to start shutting down. S&P stock futures inched
up 0.2 per cent, unchanged from earlier price action after the cash
index fell 0.6 percent on Monday, while US Treasury futures slipped five
ticks.
Most Asian markets were trading higher on Tuesday.
Political Polarization
The shutdown, the culmination of three years of divided government
and growing political polarization, was spearheaded by Tea Party
conservatives united in their opposition to Obama, their distaste for
Obama's healthcare law and their campaign pledges to rein in government
spending.
Obama refused to negotiate over the Republican demands and warned a
shutdown could “throw a wrench into the gears of our economy.”
Some government offices and national parks will be shuttered, but
spending for essential functions related to national security and public
safety will continue, including pay for US military troops.
“It's not shocking there is a shutdown, the shock is that it hasn't
happened before this,” said Republican strategist John Feehery, a former
Capitol Hill aide. “We have a divided government with such
diametrically opposed views, we need a crisis to get any kind of
results.”
In the hours leading up to the deadline, the Democratic-controlled
Senate repeatedly stripped measures passed by the House that tied
temporary funding for government operations to delaying or scaling back
the healthcare overhaul known as Obamacare. The Senate instead insisted
on funding the government through Nov. 15 without special conditions.
Whether the shutdown represents another bump in the road for a
Congress increasingly plagued by dysfunction or is a sign of a more
alarming breakdown in the political process could be determined by the
reaction among voters and on Wall Street.
“The key to this is not what happens in Washington. The key is what
happens out in the real world,” said Democratic strategist Chris
Kofinis. “When Joe Public starts rebelling, and the financial markets
start melting down, then we'll see what these guys do.”
A Reuters/Ipsos poll showed about one-quarter of Americans would
blame Republicans for a shutdown, 14 percent would blame Obama and 5
percent would blame Democrats in Congress, while 44 per cent said
everyone would be to blame.
An anticipated revolt by moderate House Republicans fizzled earlier
on Monday after House Speaker John Boehner made personal appeals to many
of them to back him on a key procedural vote, said Republican
Representative Peter King of New York.
After Boehner made his appeal, House Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer
called on him to permit a vote on a simple extension of federal funding
of the government without any Obamacare add-on.
Fallout
The potential fallout has some Republican Party leaders worried ahead
of the 2014 mid-term elections and the 2016 presidential race,
particularly given the Republican divisions over the shutdown.
Republican Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, who commandeered the Senate
floor for 21 hours last week to stoke the confrontation and urge House
colleagues to join him, sparked a feud with fellow Republicans who
disagreed with the shutdown and accused the potential 2016 presidential
candidate of grandstanding.
“Whether or not we're responsible for it, we're going to get blamed for it,” King told reporters on Monday.
Source DAWN News
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