Repubs... foot in mouth disease AGAIN

tekkychick

New member
http://maddowblog.msnbc.com/_news/2013/10/04/20818269-republicans-struggle-to-understand-their-own-shutdown-plan?lite

This time from Rep Mark Meadows, Repub North Carolina:

With this in mind, as Brian Beutler reported yesterday, "it was a big surprise" when Meadows told reporters this week that the government shutdown has nothing to do with Obamacare. "This fight now has become about veterans and about national guard folks that perhaps -- reservists that are not getting paid," the North Carolina Republican said. "That's where the fight is today."

In theory, this is excellent news. Republicans have spent the last several weeks making one demand: take away health care benefits from millions of Americans or the government's lights go out. If one of the far-right congressional ringleaders of this fiasco is arguing, on the record and out loud, that the fight is no longer about health care then the shutdown can end immediately.

This point was not lost on NPR's Tamara Keith, who asked Meadows why the House doesn't just vote on "a full CR if you don't care about Obamacare anymore." If you listen to the audio, there's an awkward silence that lasts about five seconds. Eventually, the congressman says, "Why not vote on, on a full CR?"

Keith replies, "Yeah, sure. Because if you're, if Obamacare isn't the issue to you anymore..." At this point, Meadows tried this explanation:

"Because it, twofold.One is, is, that when you when you start to look, they say 'clean CR?' That it, it translates into into to truly a blank check, and, and so Obamacare is an issue for me and my constituents, but what happens is today is, we gotta figure a way to open it back up and, and with that, in opening it back up, when we start to look at these issues, it, it is critical that we make it, the decisions we, we make to be as least harmful as they possibly can be."​

So to review, the reason the House can't vote on the Senate spending bill is an incoherent word salad, filled with lots of words that seem unrelated to one another.

Indeed, on the government shutdown's fourth day, a few truths have come into sharp focus. Republican members of Congress (1) don't know why they shut down the government; (2) don't know what they hope to get out of the shutdown; and (3) don't know how to end the shutdown.
 
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