Will never happen. Even when they’re forced to move on it won’t be because they care about doing the right thing for the country.
That latter bit (Boehner giving the TP’ers enough rope to hang themselves) is suggested by a front-page CNN article about Boehner’s history. The problem, as you say, is whether or not they actually wake up and see reason. My hope is that enough of the moderate Republicans put their feet down to force a clean (or, at least, clean-er) bill to the floor.
When I went in to “shut down” yesterday morning, we were not allowed to do anything that was actual work. Just put messages on our phones and email and a notice on the Web site, then go home. We may be paid for that time; I don’t know.
According to my co-workers who were there for the 1996 shut-down, the Federal employees were reimbursed for the lost time afterwards, but contract staff were not.
That CNN article does a good job explaining the tightrope Boehner is on. He can’t totally ignore the TP’ers. This has to play out for awhile before Boehner can craft a bill his party will support.
The House is trying to pass a bill to fund National Guard troops. They’ve been furloughed and most places have canceled drills. There may be enough House support to get this one passed. Then the pressure will be on the President if he vetoes it.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/oct/2/house-hold-do-over-vote-national-parks-veterans-dc/?utm_source=RSS_Feed&utm_medium=RSS
the DOT had another 8+ fatality mass transit accident today in TN.
oh wait. a blown tire.
well sue the tire maker, unless it was bald as hell already.
No, it won’t. You may remember there’s another chamber of Congress.
Except for the mid-1990s shutdown, I have had all of these happen to me as well.
My gut feeling is, the shutdown lasts until there’s a combined complete continuing resolution, debt limit increase, and some small thing for the Republicans so it’s not a total climbdown.
I got 3 hours RG and 6 KE on Tuesday. Of course, what I entered on Tuesday and what gets sent to payroll on Thursday after review may be two different things.
And it wasn’t a total law; since I was up anyway, I drove from my office to Ikea to pick up a new computer desk for my home (and went to one of my usual Indian places for lunch - what, is there just no such thing as “boneless goat curry”?).
Here’s a twist.
[ol]
[li]Budget negotiations continue to fail.[/li][li]Public opinion starts getting dicey.[/li][li]October 17th rolls around and the debt ceiling isn’t raised.[/li][li]Economically, things start go south real fast (relatively speaking).[/li][li]Public opinion is now hairy.[/li][li]The Tea Party ratchets up the rhetoric, calling people to protect themselves against the coming government tyranny.[/li][li]The squeamish head for the gun shops (a bit late, but what the hey).[/li][li]BANG!![/li][li]You cannot purchase (legally) many firearms because the government shutdown that started way back on October 1st shut down the background check process.[/li][li]Hell arrives.[/li][/ol]
About 200 patients a week that want to enroll in clinical trials for experimental treatments* through NIH will not be able to enroll. [Cite (from Washington Post although quote appeared in WSJ - WSJ has paywall)]
- Usually people whose conditions/diseases don’t respond or don’t respond well to conventional treatments.
That sounds plausible. I say they can have a $5 gift certificate to the Olive Garden, and that’s my final offer.
NICS is still running; it’s a law enforcement function that isn’t stopped by the lapse in funding.
Granted, no belt-fed machine guns: Processing of transfer applications (Form 1, 3, 4, etc.) is stopped for all NFA transfers; transfer application status inquiries will not be answered either. I trust the difference is clear.
The White House website is still up for the most part. I used it to send a message to the president suggesting what he can do with the Republicans who are behaving like children.
[Hijack] Hypothetically, would en Executive Order ending Congressional pay / Healthcare until the Funding as a cost saving measure make a dent in the votes of those Boneheads? Assumes SCOTUS can’t meet because its shut down. [/hijack]
Probably not, considering that several of them have already pledged to donate their pay during the shutdown to charity or debt reduction or whatever. Rah-rah.
Put them in time out and tell them they can’t have any cookies? ![]()
It may be different for the White House site–they may consider one or more people who deal with the Website mail messages necessary employees. But if it is like the .gov site I work on, any messages sent in while we’re shut down will just sit there waiting until I can go back to work. I’m not allowed even to check my own work email while we’re out, never mind the Website mail.
… and if PBS collected every pledge called in, they’d rival Microsoft. Their charities just funnel it into their back pockets in campaign contributions anyway.
It’s a stupid stunt anyway. As John Scalzi said earlier today: