“Anytime you fight for something you really believe in and something you think is important, then the fight is going to be worth it.”
— Rep. Mick Mulvaney (R-SC), interviewed on CNN, on the 16 day government shutdown.
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“Anytime you fight for something you really believe in and something you think is important, then the fight is going to be worth it.”
— Rep. Mick Mulvaney (R-SC), interviewed on CNN, on the 16 day government shutdown.
First Read: “Unless we missed it, we didn’t hear a single apology from members of Congress, especially from the side that precipitated the shutdown. The president apologized once last week for all this.”
The Hill notes that nearly every potential 2016 Republican presidential candidate serving in Congress opposed the deal to fund the government and raise the debt limit.
Joshua Green: “While the shutdown might look like the spectacular self-immolation of a band of bitter enders, it’s better understood as the natural consequence of a decades-long shift in the American political landscape…Congress has become so intensely divided that there isn’t much room left at the edges of the ideological continuum. Far from being an aberration, crises are more like the new normal…It’s not hard to envision a future that looks an awful lot like the present, with Republicans just strong enough to maintain control of the House, but shut out of the Senate and White House, and Democrats unable to regain the unified control of Washington they enjoyed during Obama’s first two years. This is a formula for plenty of drama and few accomplishments.”
National Journal: “Two main assumptions underpin those Democratic hopes. The first is that Republicans, wounded politically in the current shutdown bout, will not want to rehash another government-shutdown battle in only 90 days. The second is that GOP hawks will come to the table to discuss unwinding the automatic cuts in place due to sequestration because the defense sector will take a bigger share of cutbacks in 2014 than it did in 2013.”
“Both assumptions could prove false. Democrats have consistently overestimated the current, tea-party-infused Republican Party’s willingness to negotiate away sequestration because of defense spending. And plenty of House Republicans, even amid plummeting poll numbers, did not sound ready to give up the fight.”
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s Republican enemies “seized on a provision included in the final deal they said was a betrayal of conservative causes,” the Lexington Herald Leader reports.
“The deal contained a $2.8 billion authorization for the Olmstead lock and dam project in Western Kentucky that at first glance appeared to many as McConnell sneaking pork into the last-minute bill. While McConnell was the target, Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander said he asked for its inclusion.”
“I’m not prepared to suggest that this has been a complete loss.”
— Rep. Cynthia Lummis (R-WY), quoted by the New York Times, on the 16 day government shutdown.
New York Times: “In the two and half years since they took control of the House, Republicans have gone from early legislative victories that cut government spending to a string of defeats that have grown worse over time. The latest ended with a bill that was expected to pass early Thursday and that would leave the country almost exactly where it had been before, only billions of dollars poorer and as a puzzlement to the world.”
“Two years of failed strategies to handcuff the Democratic minority have left Mr. Boehner as mostly a bystander while the most conservative members of his conference — who propelled him to power nearly three years ago — took the tiller of the House in their hands. Their goal: to dismantle what they consider to be an overreaching government, one vote at a time.”
The deal reached by Congress to end the government shutdown and raise the debt ceiling “averts a financial catastrophe but leaves the weakened U.S. economy facing new threats,” the Washington Post reports.
“But while the bipartisan deal ends a period of disruption that has slowed the economy — the shutdown removed more than $20 billion in direct government spending and related economic activity — it creates new perils, setting up other economy-shaking deadlines in just a few months.”
“It also does almost nothing for the country’s existing economic challenges, including automatic spending cuts that are worsening the problem of high unemployment and a long-term debt challenge posed by mounting costs in health-care and retirement programs.”
A new Quinnipiac poll in New Jersey finds Gov. Chris Christie (R) buring challenger Barbara Buono (D) by 29 points among likely voters, 62% to 33%.
Congressional Republicans “conceded defeat in their bitter budget fight with President Obama over the new health care law, agreeing to end a disruptive 16-day government shutdown and extend federal borrowing power to avert a financial default with potentially worldwide economic repercussions,” the New York Times reports.
“With the Treasury Department warning that it could run out of money to pay national obligations within a day, the Senate voted overwhelmingly Wednesday evening, 81 to 18, to approve a proposal hammered out by the chamber’s Republican and Democratic leaders after the House on Tuesday was unable to move forward with any resolution. The House followed suit a few hours later, voting 285 to 144, to approve the Senate plan, which would finance the government through Jan. 15 and raise the debt limit through Feb. 7.”
Cory Booker (D) defeated Steve Lonegan (R) to become New Jersey’s newest U.S. senator, according to projections by the Associated Press.
Roll Call: “The rise to the Senate is the latest move for a politician whose ambitions are believed to reach even higher. He has already been mentioned as a potential vice presidential running mate in 2016.”
The U.S. Senate passes a bipartisan solution to the weekslong budget crisis, voting 81-18 to raise the nation’s borrowing limit and fully reopen the federal government, the Wall Street Journal reports.
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) “came up empty-handed Wednesday in his battle to gut the Affordable Care Act, saying that he wouldn’t stand in the way of a Senate budget deal that includes none of the major changes to the health-care law that conservatives were seeking,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
Politico notes Cruz “was resolute and firm, declining to admit defeat and instead chastising the ‘Washington establishment’ for waving the white flag on the health care law.”
Meanwhile, Think Progress points out Cruz pointed out he has more than 2 million names on his email list.
A new Public Policy Polling survey in South Dakota finds that the U.S. Senate race has tightened since the summer, with Mike Rounds (R) now winning by only 6 points over Rick Weiland (D), 40% to 34%, with Libertarian Kurt Evans at 11%.
A new Pew Research survey finds the Tea Party “is less popular than ever, with even many Republicans now viewing the movement negatively. Overall, 49% of the public has an unfavorable opinion of the Tea Party, while 30% have a favorable opinion.”
“The Tea Party’s favorability rating has fallen across most groups since June, but the decline has been particularly dramatic among moderate and liberal Republicans. In the current survey, just 27% of moderate and liberal Republicans have a favorable impression of the Tea Party, down from 46% in June.”
Wonk Wire shows that Congress’s budget fights, debt-ceiling stand-offs, and spending cuts have cost the U.S. economy nearly 3% of GDP since 2010 — roughly $700 billion in lost economic activity.
“We fought the good fight, we just didn’t win.”
— Speaker John Boehner, in an interview with WLW-AM, on the budget and debt limit showdown.
Taegan Goddard is the founder of Political Wire, one of the earliest and most influential political web sites. He also runs Political Job Hunt, Electoral Vote Map and the Political Dictionary.
Goddard spent more than a decade as managing director and chief operating officer of a prominent investment firm in New York City. Previously, he was a policy adviser to a U.S. Senator and Governor.
Goddard is also co-author of You Won - Now What? (Scribner, 1998), a political management book hailed by prominent journalists and politicians from both parties. In addition, Goddard's essays on politics and public policy have appeared in dozens of newspapers across the country.
Goddard earned degrees from Vassar College and Harvard University. He lives in New York with his wife and three sons.
Goddard is the owner of Goddard Media LLC.
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