The Albatross
VIP Member
Gottcha, I'll dig it up but not tonight. I basically threw up on the title of the thread. It was cathartic but maybe not a very good discussion, eh? :O_o:
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In that quote, I was referring to the agreement from 14 months ago that you mentioned, where the Dems and Repubs had agreed on budget numbers. I wasn't familiar with that specific agreement.
In my original post, I indicated that I thought this post might cause a little trouble. ;) But trouble of the kind that gets people talking, arguing, and, unlike our "esteemed" representatives, probably coming to some basic form of reasonable agreement long before they do. In short, you are supposed to be keyed-up. This stuff matters, no matter what point of view you have.Thank you for your graciousness... I had no idea how keyed up I was by the tread title.
This was getting press today. The Democrats have now rejected a plan by Senator Collins, from Maine, their best friend in the Senate on the Republican side, because the plan doesn't extend funding and debt levels for as long as they want, and because they want the original budgeting levels to be enacted, not the sequester-based levels. There may have been one or two other issues.Their House counterparts have now vowed to ignore that figure and instead push for a $1.058 trillion, the level originally set by the Budget Control Act. House Democratic Caucus Chairman Xavier Becerra called the Republican budget proposal “lunacy,” and Minority Whip Steny Hoyer has promised a fight.
Why do you think this is backwards? I don't even know why the colors are assigned as they are -- I just thought it was some tradition. :)obscure reference to the colors associated with their political party assigned by the NY Times and which I happen to think of as an insult because frankly, it's backwards.
If the Republicans have removed the issues regarding ACA and provided a "clean bill", then the Democrats need to do what they've implied they were going to do all along -- sign it. At this point, if ACA and other pinpoint targets are off the table, it is now up to the Democrats as to whether the government opens or not, and whether we default or not. If we default, even after a clean bill has been offered, it will be time for serious action to change our leadership en masse, regardless of the challenges.but the Republicans were trying to hang on to SOME fiscal policy in a climate where there is no operating budget, no attempt to balance spending an revenues, and with the advent of yet another government subsidized entitlement program.
If the Republicans have removed the issues regarding ACA and provided a "clean bill", then the Democrats need to do what they've implied they were going to do all along -- sign it. At this point, if ACA and other pinpoint targets are off the table, it is now up to the Democrats as to whether the government opens or not, and whether we default or not. If we default, even after a clean bill has been offered, it will be time for serious action to change our leadership en masse, regardless of the challenges.
I'm not sure we disagree. :) I don't believe that the Dems should be ignoring the Sequester. That was not what they claimed their problem to be; they asked for a "clean bill" that didn't target ACA, period. And they were getting that; but they are now playing around, like a cat playing with a mouse.If the Dems wanted to ignore Sequester, which is law by the way, just as much as ACA is... then it was not out of line to attach something to the increase in spending.