Puffnstuff
Lifer
- Mar 9, 2005
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Yep, kicked the can again. I thought that was just a kids game.Looks like they kicked it down the road again for 45 days.
Mitch & Kevin McCuck each stated support for Ukraine. I suspect there is wiggle room regarding funding it’s also worded as no additional funding or something similar. Plainly it’s to appease MAGA Shitheads.Yep, kicked the can again. I thought that was just a kids game.
is the senate able to add the aide to the Ukraine back in? Don’t know if is some rule that gets around the normal system.
And that’s the key point. The house (on the republican side), is almost completely dysfunctional. When you have someone like McCarthy saying he’s the only adult in the room - well, that’s a pretty scary situation.Republicans may not be responsible for all shutdowns but they are definitely responsible for this one. The senate CR would easily pass the house but Republicans refuse to bring it up for a vote.
Yep, kicked the can again. I thought that was just a kids game.
is the senate able to add the aide to the Ukraine back in? Don’t know if is some rule that gets around the normal system.
ROFL yeah it was the Democrats' fault Trump shut the government down as soon as his Republican House left for Christmas and the newly elected Democrat House wouldn't give him the border wall he never pressured his Republican House to deliver.
ROFL both sidesing this when it's your party that keeps shutting the government down
ROFL bothsidesing it when you're having to dig back 25-30 years to blame Democrats for a shutdown.So are you attempting to indicate that the Democrats have never caused a shutdown?
ROFL bothsidesing it when you're having to dig back 25-30 years to blame Democrats for a shutdown.
Not in the last 25 years. It has been a GOP solo act shutting the government down.Regardless of the time periods, the point was both parties cause these gaps...
With that out of the way, I think that these assholes Gaetz, MTG and Chip Roy ... are shitheads that are just doing shithead things...
Not in the last 25 years. It has been a GOP solo act shutting the government down.
And that’s the key point. The house (on the republican side), is almost completely dysfunctional. When you have someone like McCarthy saying he’s the only adult in the room - well, that’s a pretty scary situation.
Every shutdown has been caused by the Republican Congress. The Democrats threatened to do it in the '80s when Reagan was president but they realized it was a terrible bluff and would be even more terrible if they followed through so they didn't follow through. In other words they didn't shut down the government. Only the GQP.Not all shutdowns are due to Republicans.
List of United States federal funding gaps - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
No, it's not (quite) the same issue.Is this a necro? I thought you were all arguing about a shutdown back at the start of the year?
Why are you all debating this again? Is it Groundhog day (again)? I don't remember waking up to "I got you babe".
Is this the same issue as this thread?
Debt Limitapalooza 2023!
The debt limit will be reached on the 19th necessitating “extraordinary means”. https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2023/01/13/us-will-hit-its-debt-limit-thursday-start-taking-steps-to-avoid-default-yellen-warns-congress.html What’s your default position on what’s going to happen?forums.anandtech.com
No, it's not (quite) the same issue.
Every year or so the government sets a budget with spending commitments. If they don't the government "shuts down", going into minimal spending mode, until they do. This is bad, as some people like government employees and welfare recipients won't get paid, but not a disaster. It's happened several times, and it will probably happen again. But not for at least 40-some days! This "continuing resolution" is an agreement (resolution) to keep (continue) spending like the last budget, for 45 days.
The government gets money to spend by taxes, by issuing bonds (which are loans taken out from bond buyers), and by printing money. The previous issue was that, for some reason, the government set a "debt limit" beyond which it will stop issuing bonds and printing money. The problem is, if the government doesn't borrow money, it will have to stop paying everything, including its "mortgage" of bonds. It's a politically manufactured time-bomb. Aside from nobody getting paid, defaulting on its loans would make it harder to get future loans. Printing money is also an option, e.g. the trillion-dollar coin, but it tends to cause more inflation in the medium-to-long term.
You mean facts? LOL you blaming the scary negro president because the House GOP shut the government down for him implementing the fucking healthcare law he got passed. LOL you blaming the Democrats for Trump shutting the government down when they didn't give him the border wall he never asked his own party to pass when it was in power because it was just a campaign slogan he never actually gave a shit about.Whatever you want to believe.
What?So this time it's that the government forgot to present a budget - that thing when the Chancellor of the Exchequer stands up in parliament and announces he's adding two pence to the price of a pint of beer, and so on, or whatever the equivalent is in the US system - in this case they just didn't get round to doing that? Overslept, maybe? Left the famous red briefcase on the kitchen table? And because of that everything grinds to a halt?
What a weird ramshackle system.
The US system has _issues_. And it's not as if it has the excuse of being a thousand years old and based on watery bints distributing swords or something, and thus can't help being weird.
What?
The US creates bills setting out everything they're going to spend and everything they're going to tax, ideally every year. (They often do continuing resolutions without this much fireworks.) While some things, such as Social Security, have been voted in effectively forever, they won't get money until the budget is passed. It's possible for Congress to agree to do something, then allocate $0 to it, so it doesn't get done. It's also possible for Congress to require the President (or a subsidiary part of the executive branch such as NASA) to spend money he doesn't want to spend. This is called "the power of the purse".
There's also a set of made-up rules for what can go in a budget bill requiring only 51/100 senators, instead of 60/100, to agree to it. Whether each provision of a budget adheres to or violates these rules is announced by the Senate Parliamentarian. Maybe that's like your Chancellor of the Exchequer?
Maybe not. It looks like the British system doesn't carefully separate legislators from the executive branch (the President and most government agencies). The Senate Parliamentarian just judges rules the Senate has made up for itself. The Chancellor of the Exchequer seems more like the treasury secretary, which in our system is part of the executive branch. But they have no real power; spending control, "the power of the purse", is reserved to Congress.
To me government shutdowns aren't really a problem. They're deeply stupid but if Congress doesn't want to spend money on X then that's their business. The debt ceiling is the real monster that needs to be abolished.This article seems to answer my question. Interesting/darkly-funny that Northern Ireland - and only Northern Ireland - did seem to come close to the same problem as the US. I suppose that's a reflection on how polarised the US is now.
Seems that every political system has its own unique forms of farce.
Due to groundhog actually posting.Is this a necro? I thought you were all arguing about a shutdown back at the start of the year?
Why are you all debating this again? Is it Groundhog day (again)? I don't remember waking up to "I got you babe".
Is this the same issue as this thread?
Debt Limitapalooza 2023!
The debt limit will be reached on the 19th necessitating “extraordinary means”. https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2023/01/13/us-will-hit-its-debt-limit-thursday-start-taking-steps-to-avoid-default-yellen-warns-congress.html What’s your default position on what’s going to happen?forums.anandtech.com
I think it only the US and the Netherlands that have a debt ceiling, and the Dutch are smart enough to put the limit so high that they won't ever reach it.To me government shutdowns aren't really a problem. They're deeply stupid but if Congress doesn't want to spend money on X then that's their business. The debt ceiling is the real monster that needs to be abolished.