The
national political debate is slowly shifting from Tea Party vs. Obama to an
internal GOP rift over avoiding defeat in 2014 and 2016.
Oklahoma
Sen. Tom Coburn predicts that shutting down government to block funds for
ObamaCare could destroy his party. “The strategy that has been laid out is a
good way for Republicans to lose the House,” he says.
It’s “the
dumbest idea I've ever heard,” adds North Carolina Sen. Richard Burr.
Meanwhile,
the White House concentrates on taking its case to the country and avoiding
another fiscal cliff on the debt ceiling. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew insists there
will be no negotiations this fall to avoid a default such as those that led to
a downgrade of the nation's credit rating in 2011:
"Congress
is going to have to pass a debt limit that can reach bipartisan consensus in
the Congress and that the president can sign into law."
The
President himself tells New York Times interviewers
he is concentrating on those “who are working really hard, are trying to figure
out how they can send their kids to college, are trying to make sure that they
can save for their retirement.”
If
Congress is willing to work with him, he is ready but if the Republican
response is “no on everything,” he won’t “sit around and twiddle my thumbs for
the next 1,200 days.”
Meanwhile,
Barack Obama is also looking beyond that time as he hosts Hillary Clinton at a
White House lunch today. No doubt one of the subjects of their conversation
will be what happens next if the GOP doesn’t get its act together on mending
the growing cracks in its Tea Party cups.
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