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Government Shutdown Looms As Congress Fights Over Spending, FEMA Disaster Relief Funds

Government Shutdown Congress Fema

First Posted: 09/26/11 09:18 AM ET Updated: 11/26/11 05:12 AM ET

By LAURIE KELLMAN, Associated Press

(AP) WASHINGTON -- Congress is once again allowing shutdown politics to bring the federal government to the brink of closing.

For the second time in nine months, lawmakers are bickering and posturing over spending plans. The difference this time is that everyone agrees on the massive barrel of money to keep the government running for another seven weeks.

"It is embarrassing," Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., admitted Sunday on CNN's "State of the Union." Warner asked: "Can we, once again, inflict on the country and the American people the spectacle of a near government shutdown?"

At issue is a small part of the almost $4 trillion budget intended for an infrequent purpose: federal dollars to help victims of floods, hurricanes, tornadoes and other natural disasters and whether some of the expense should be offset by cuts in other government spending.

This sort of crisis management has cost Congress credibility in the eyes of the electorate, with about eight in 10 Americans disapproving of the institution's performance after this summer's debt crisis. A major credit agency downgraded the nation's ratings as a result, unnerving the world's financial markets.

The current standoff raises a question: If lawmakers can't even agree to help victims of natural disasters, how are they going to strike a deal to cut $1.5 trillion in spending this fall in the white-hot climate of presidential and congressional politics?

The uncertainty isn't helping officials in Joplin, Mo., desperate to rebuild homes and put people back to work after a devastating tornado in May.

"We can appreciate the efforts to get our national economy in better order, but we're concerned about how that's going to affect us," Joplin Mayor Mike Woolston said Friday, as Congress headed home for the weekend, the standoff unresolved.

Woolston said he thinks lawmakers will come to an agreement before the Federal Emergency Management Agency runs out of money this week; FEMA officials said it had just $175 million in its coffers.

"But the devil's in the details," he said. "How long will it take, how much disaster funding will there be?"

That depends on whether the closely divided Senate and Republican-controlled House can find reason to agree, and then do it - a tall order against a history of nick-of-time accords over the budget in April and raising the debt limit in late July.

This time, even the promise of a scheduled vacation this week couldn't break the impasse. Lawmakers instead backed themselves into a new standoff Friday, requiring at least the Senate to come back in session part of this week.

On Friday, the Democratic-controlled Senate blocked the House bill that would provide stop-gap federal spending, plus aid for people battered by a spate of natural disasters. The legislation also calls for $1.6 billion in spending cuts to help defray the disaster costs.

The House, meanwhile, left town for a weeklong recess and the Jewish holidays.

What remained was a familiar so's-your-mother partisan spat, with trillions of federal dollars - more than $3 billion for disaster victims - at stake.

Democrats complained that it's unprecedented and unfair to insist that spending cuts accompany badly needed emergency aid. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., who earlier in the week had said passage of the bill was urgent, on Friday put off a vote until Monday. The only option, he said, was to "capitulate to the job-destroying bill" from the House.

While Warner joined those blaming tea party-driven House Republicans, Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., pointed to Reid. "He manufactured a crisis all week about disaster when there's no crisis," Alexander told CNN. He accused Democrats of "chest-pounding and game-playing."

Republicans say that with a $14 trillion-plus national debt, voters will find it outrageous that Democrats wouldn't accept $1.6 billion in spending cuts. Democrats, they said, had not learned the lesson of the 2010 elections, when tea party-backed conservatives won enough seats to give Republicans control of the House.

"We are sending a message to people that freezing spending is paramount," said one of those GOP freshmen, Michigan Rep. Bill Huizenga.

Democrats, meanwhile, are betting voters will find it petty and manipulative to let tornado and hurricane victims wonder if federal aid will be denied because lawmakers want to cut aid to automakers.

It's possible that Congress will find a last-minute way to avoid a shutdown of many federal agencies when the fiscal year ends on Friday. The Senate plans to vote Monday on a Democratic bill that would not require spending offsets to release new money for FEMA.

But GOP leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky is confident Republicans will block the Democrats' move. It takes 41 votes to sustain a filibuster in the 100-member Senate, and the Republicans hold 47 seats.

If the GOP succeeds, the Senate could accept the House Republican bill it rejected on Friday. Or legislative leaders could try to negotiate their way past the logjam. House leaders said they don't plan to call their members back to Washington.

Still looming is the rest of the debt-limit deal. By Thanksgiving, a supercommittee of 12 House and Senate Democrats and Republicans must produce $1.5 trillion in cuts over the next decade. If they stumble, or Congress rejects their proposal, automatic cuts of $1.2 trillion would kick in, slashing domestic and defense programs. Congress is slated to vote on that package by the end of the year.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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By LAURIE KELLMAN, Associated Press (AP) WASHINGTON -- Congress is once again allowing shutdown politics to bring the federal government to the brink of closing. For the second time in nine mont...
By LAURIE KELLMAN, Associated Press (AP) WASHINGTON -- Congress is once again allowing shutdown politics to bring the federal government to the brink of closing. For the second time in nine mont...
Filed by Alexander Belenky  | 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimtodd
Unrepentant child of '60s
01:35 PM on 10/09/2011
Everyone knows that natural disasters are god's way of communicating his displeasure with our behavior, and providing relief to the sufferers would be going against god's will. The challenge is to interpret the message, and fortunately we have an ample supply of the religiously touched to perform that service. Without these brave souls we would go on thinking that god loves everyone and not just the rich and their enablers. Of course, if this does not agree with your vision of god, you can just accept the fact that teavangelicals are genetically prevented from passing up a chance to screw the American people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joseph Veverka
09:51 AM on 09/28/2011
Congressional GOPers want so bad to give their corp bosses another tax cut they are willing to tank the economy. The arguement is corp are over taxed, well if that where so why do most Americans making 100k and over decide to "incorporate" their income. Not only concerete and brick but individuals use corp shadow tax rate to pay nothing. Do they want to pay higher raxes as the GOP say they do, no its because corp pay little or, no taxes and everyone knows it, especially corp tax gurus. So again the GOP wants us to beleive in the fairy tail that corp pay too much. I say we should charge a surtax on all imports. America is the martket place of the world, if we don't protect that market we not only have lost our jobs but the last power to control our future. Charge an import duty and then they would be paying some tax instead of none to do business in the good USA.
06:36 AM on 09/27/2011
Reid and Obama are both "Showboats" that let people suffer until they get there photo opt. It's all about the party and the votes.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
barnybilt
12:12 AM on 09/27/2011
The Republicans have made our Government like a doughnut hole, the Countries around the Government, but there is nothing in the hole.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
barnybilt
12:09 AM on 09/27/2011
Republicans have strange views on things. They seem to think they were elected not to govern, and representing their constituents is a if they want to thingy. They probably think one hires a gardener to kill the grass. A maid to steal the bed instead of making it. Or a baby setter to actually set on the baby. Congress to them is the plug to be pulled on the Governments power supply. Instead of running the Government, they want shut down the thing they were elected to make run.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
barnybilt
12:00 AM on 09/27/2011
The 112 Congress is the Republicans and the Tea Party showing America how great they will govern America when they control the whole Government. It's like a movie trailer telling of an upcoming feature presentation. Don't like the trailer? Don't see the movie.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
barnybilt
11:54 PM on 09/26/2011
The American voters created the 112 Congress, so their getting what they asked for.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sskepticall
10:07 PM on 09/26/2011
This is almost like a strike, except the ones that call the strike still get paid - those that are affected by the strike don't. Hmmmmm hardly fair I keep thinking.

The Congress refuses to do its job of keeping the government open and operating so what happens to them when they shut it down? They still get paid while everyone else doesn’t or they work off the books because they care about their work.

I used to think that if I were an enemy of this nation I would attack when the dumbos in Congress failed to keep the government open and operating. We are at war and they want to play games?...what a bunch of world class idiots.

So my solution is this. If the government is shut down by the inaction of the Congress to provide funding to keep it open - then all congressional representatives (house and senate) and all of their workers and staffers SHOULDN'T GET PAID! Then I thought - well that hurts the responsible congressional representatives who voted to keep the Congress open. They shouldn't be punished I thought.

So I have modified my belief....at least for now...if you vote to keep the government open you get paid (and so does your wise staff), if you vote against bills to keep it open then you don't get paid - nor does your staff or any of the workers on the Hill - unless they are essential employees (security).
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onehenry
Tea bags lose their flavor
06:49 PM on 09/26/2011
Let the republicans shut the government down with their heartless bill. It will be the one thing the American voter will remember.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ASK AMERICA
“. . .liberty and justice for all."
07:07 PM on 09/26/2011
ABSOLUTELY TRUE; AND IF THEY DON'T REMEMBER, WE'LL REMIND THEM!!! RIGHT?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
catbite
06:42 PM on 09/26/2011
Again, Mitch McConnell at the head of the GOP encouraging negative activity. He's a meanie.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ASK AMERICA
“. . .liberty and justice for all."
07:09 PM on 09/26/2011
HE IS MORE THAN MEAN!!! HE IS ANTI-AMERICAN!!!
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Mollyj
Not Pistol Annie, it's shotgun Mollyj
06:37 PM on 09/26/2011
The password is shutdown! The game is GOP!

SHUT IT DOWN ALLREADY! all talks no guts!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ASK AMERICA
“. . .liberty and justice for all."
07:12 PM on 09/26/2011
You need to do some research and find out what that would do to this country, and the rest of the world!!!

There is something worse than "no guts!" Shot from the lips, and no thinking!!!
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Mollyj
Not Pistol Annie, it's shotgun Mollyj
09:25 PM on 09/26/2011
_no need it's given, this is how GOP works! we all know it!

SHUTDOWN THE GOVERNMENT! Install Martial Law!
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HST
Conservatism = selfishness
05:16 PM on 09/26/2011
Teapublicons doing what they do best, crippling the government so they can point fingers at it and claim it doesn't work.


"Republicans are the party that claims government doesn't work, then they get elected and prove it." -P.J. O'Rourke
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ASK AMERICA
“. . .liberty and justice for all."
07:14 PM on 09/26/2011
THAT'S BECAUSE THEY CAN'T GOVERN!!! DEMOCRATS ARE QUITE SUCCESSFUL, WHEN THEY CAN GET THE TEAPUBLICANS OUT OF THE WAY!!!
07:25 PM on 09/26/2011
yeah! if the dems only held the majority in both houses, just this once maybe they could make it all better...oh wait...
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Stephen1349
The law is reason..free from passion.
04:43 PM on 09/26/2011
This country ceased to be a democracy when running for office became about being in the money. Anybody seen a poor man get elected lately.....to anything??? LOL
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onehenry
Tea bags lose their flavor
06:51 PM on 09/26/2011
Yes. Perry, he is a Poor excuse of a man.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ASK AMERICA
“. . .liberty and justice for all."
04:38 PM on 09/26/2011
CONGRESSIONAL GOP HAS HELD OUR COUNTRY HOSTAGE TO THE DEBT CEILING; AND NOW HOLDS US HOSTAGE FOR FEMA RELIEF FUNDS FOR DISASTER VICTIMS!!!!!

AND THEY CALL AL-QAIDA HOSTAGE TAKERS!!!!!

JUST WAIT UNTIL THE GUYS AND GALS OVERSEAS FIND OUT WHAT THE GOP IS DOING TO THEIR CHILDREN, PARENTS, BROTHERS, SISTERS, UNCLES, AUNTS, AND GRANDPARENTS!!!!!

ESPECIALLY THE MARINES: SEMPER FI!!!!!
04:20 PM on 09/26/2011
The newly elected members of the house,( TEA), will continue to put pressure on the GOP for budget cuts in every bill that goes through the house. It is the only way that they will be able to get the overall cuts that are necessary to get our budget more in line with revenues.