Daily News Brief September 30, 2013 |
Top of the Agenda: U.S. Government on Brink of Shutdown
The
U.S. government is on the brink of its first partial shutdown in
seventeen years after a weekend of negotiations between the House and
Senate over passing a clean budget ended in stalemate (Bloomberg).
Republicans in the House, along with some Democrats, voted to delay the
implementation of President Obama's landmark healthcare overhaul law
for a year as a compromise to keep the government open, a position that was quickly rejected by Senate leaders (AP). Stock markets in Japan, Australia, Hong Kong, and South Korea declined over concerns about the shutdown (BBC).
Analysis
"Mr.
Obama also refuses to bend on any part of ObamaCare—except when he
unilaterally announces bending in his own political interest. He decided
on his own, and contrary to the plain text of the law, to delay for a year the business mandate to provide insurance for employees. He also unilaterally delayed verifying the income of Americans seeking subsidies," the Wall Street Journal writes in an editorial.
"Delaying
the health law by a year, supported by all but two House Republicans,
would prevent 11 million uninsured people from getting coverage in 2014
and raise premiums for those buying coverage in the individual insurance
market. The real goal is not to delay but to destroy health reform by making it appear unworkable," the New York Times writes in an editorial.
"And so we have arrived at the bizarre juncture where it makes more sense for Mr. Obama to talk to the leader of Iran than to talk to Congress.
Republicans will soon face the choice of climbing down from their
demands or pressing the fiscal equivalent of the nuclear button. Either
route will bring them defeat. Everyone must hope that they opt for the
less glorious version this time," writes Edward Luce in the Financial Times.
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