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Outside View: Republicans childish on budget, Obamacare
by Peter Morici
College Park, Md. (UPI) Sep 24, 2013


Pentagon prepares for possible US government shutdown
Washington (AFP) Sept 23, 2013 - The Pentagon warned its workforce on Monday that it is preparing for a possible government shutdown if Congress fails to break a political impasse.

If US government agencies are forced to shutter, American troops around the world would stay on the job and some civilian employees would be ordered on unpaid leave, Pentagon spokesman George Little told reporters.

But paychecks for military service members might be delayed while Congress would have to take action to ensure retroactive pay for civilians required to come to work, he added.

"Military personnel would be paid but maybe not on time," he said.

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel planned to send out a memo to department workers Monday saying the Office of Management and Budget had asked the Pentagon "to review and update our plans in order to prepare for an orderly government shutdown," according to Little.

President Barack Obama's administration believes that Congress should find a political agreement to avoid "a lapse in funding," he said.

"A shutdown would put severe hardships on an already stressed workforce and is totally unnecessary," he added.

A deeply divided Congress has until October 1, the beginning of fiscal year 2014, to reach a budget compromise.

House Republicans voted Friday for a spending plan that strips all funds for Obama's health care law, setting up a confrontation with the Democratic-led Senate, which is expected to reject the measure.

The Pentagon did not say what share of its civilian employees would be furloughed if the shutdown goes ahead next week.

Military operations in Afghanistan would not be affected by a shutdown and would continue, Little said.

"We're going to continue the war effort."

When the Pentagon prepared for a possible shutdown in 2011 that was averted in a last-minute deal, officials designated certain department activities as necessary that needed to continue.

The "essential" services included medical care, mess halls, child care, legal offices, logistics, training, department schools and some accounting sections.

House Republicans are behaving like children threatening to shut down the U.S. government, especially when they have better options to move their agenda.

The U.S. House of Representatives has passed a bill to keep the government funded at current levels after Sept. 30, less any funds for Obamacare. U.S. Senate Democrats will send it back to the House stripped of that provision, where it will likely fail.

Theoretically the government will run out of money. However, Uncle Sam will continue withholding taxes from paychecks and businesses must continue quarterly payments.

U.S. President Barack Obama has authority to continue mandatory spending programs -- Social Security and other benefits checks should go out -- and to respond to emergencies involving the safety of human life and property. The latter may embrace a pretty wide swath but if history is any guide, the president will engage in some juvenile behavior of his own.

During the early days of sequestration, he sullenly threatened public safety by not realigning funds to keep enough air traffic controllers and food inspectors on the job.

Draconian warnings that prison guards and cooks won't be paid are extrapolation from such conduct. Will he release the inmates at federal penitentiaries to avoid keeping and feeding them in their cells?

Obama wants to run America like a banana republic -- impose whatever laws he likes and reduce Congress to a compliant debating society.

Obamacare was passed through Congress by sleight of hand -- a few Republican Senators were duped into voting for the bill on the supposition it would be renegotiated in a House-Senate conference committee that never materialized.

The law hasn't gained legitimacy among the majority of Americans to the peril of Democrats. In states where Senate races will be highly contested next fall and in House districts leaning Republican or likely to be contested, polls indicate a significant majority of independent voters oppose Obamacare.

Shutting down the government will spoil that potential GOP support -- especially because the president is in a position to make such a shutdown as painful as possible.

Obamacare is already creating huge headaches. So much so, businesses have been exempted from the requirement they provide health insurance to employees for one year, the state and federal health insurance exchanges are simply not ready to provide accurate pricing and coverage information to individuals who must purchase coverage under the law, labor unions that supported the law are asking for permanent exemptions from the law and employers like Starbucks are compelled by the law's rigid application to drop insurance coverage for part-time workers.

House Republicans would do better to exploit those problems by linking continued government funding to a one-year delay in the individual mandate to purchase health insurance and some the law's other more onerous requirements and offer the president the opportunity to renegotiate the law in ways that broaden public support and make it palatable to most Americans.

That would give Republicans a platform to run on next fall but Republicans cling to false notions that the healthcare system was just fine before Obamacare. Alas, it wasn't and remains much more expensive than the German and many other European systems that deliver universal coverage and better results.

Obstructionist threats and obstinance won't make the GOP a governing party again and will result in the election of a more Democratic House, a continuing Democratic Senate and another Democratic president to succeed Obama.

Like adolescents maturing to adulthood, Republicans must learn to deal with the world as they find it, not as they wish it would be.

(Peter Morici, an economist and professor at the University of Maryland Robert H. Smith School of Business, is a widely published columnist.)

(United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)

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