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Saturday, September 28, 2013
US Braces for PossibleShutdown
The US government is bracing for a possible
shutdown, as Republicans and Democrats in
Congress remain deadlocked on a budget to
continue its funding.
Agencies have begun making contingency plans
ahead of the October 1 deadline to pass a new
funding resolution.
The Senate has passed a bill to fund the
government through November 15.
But House Republicans have said they refuse to
approve the bill absent a provision to strip
funding from President Barack Obama's health
law.
The Senate is controlled by Obama's Democratic
party, while the Republicans hold the majority in
the House of Representatives, reports the BBC.
As a result, lawmakers are at a stalemate as the
deadline approaches.
Government agencies have been selecting
workers considered essential should funds stop
flowing.
Obama exhorts conservatives
The looming shutdown is one of two fiscal crises
facing the US government. On October 17, the
US treasury department's authority to borrow
money to fund its debt obligations expires unless
Congress approves a rise in the so-called debt
ceiling.
Reid tells reporters 'time is gone' for Republican
efforts to stall a spending bill
On Friday afternoon, President Barack Obama
urged House Republicans to pass the Senate's
stopgap budget bill and to extend the debt limit,
and demanded they not threaten to "burn the
house down because you haven't gotten 100% of
your way".
Obama said if the nation were to default on its
debt, it would have a "profound destabilising
effect" on the world economy.
"Voting for the treasury to pay its bills is not a
concession to me," he said. "No-one gets to hurt
our economy... just because there are a couple of
laws [they] don't like."
He described the healthcare law as "a done deal"
and said the Republican-backed repeal effort was
"not going to happen".
Obama said the Senate had "acted responsibly"
in passing the budget measure and that now it
was up to Republicans in the House of
Representatives "to do the same".
If the government does shut down on October 1,
as many as a third of its 2.1 million employees are
expected to stop work - with no guarantee of
back pay once the deadlock is resolved.
National parks and the Smithsonian museums in
the nation's capital would close, pension and
veterans' benefit cheques would be delayed, and
visa and passport applications would be stymied.
Programmes deemed essential, such as air traffic
control and food inspections, would continue.
The defence department has advised employees
that uniformed members of the military will
continue on "normal duty status", but "large
numbers" of civilian workers will be told to stay
home.
Last week, the US House of Representatives a bill
that would maintain the US government's
funding levels through November 15 but strip
funding from Obama's health law, known as
Obamacare.
On Friday the Senate passed a version of the bill
with the defunding provision removed 54-44,
largely on party lines.
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