Tea Party Discovers Political Reality, for Now

WASHINGTON (AP) The tea party may have learned its lesson.

As Congress finishes work on a must-pass spending bill set for votes next week, the most conservative lawmakers on Capitol Hill are eager to send a message on immigration, and stand firm against a government lending bank.

But a year after they forced a 16-day partial government shutdown over President Barack Obama's health care law, few seem to have the stomach to push their demands that far again.

"No question we learned that with the aid of the news media the Democrats were able to pin the blame on us" for last year's shutdown, said conservative Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Ala.

This time around, Brooks said, "We need to pass whatever funding necessary to prevent a government shutdown, first and foremost."

Rep. John Fleming, R-La., another tea party-aligned lawmaker, said: "I don't think any of us want to have a big battle" over the spending bill to fund government operations into December.

Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy announced Wednesday that votes on the measure would be put off to next week to give lawmakers time to weigh the Obama administration's request to include authorization to aid Syrian rebels fighting Islamic State terrorists.

But that delay could create space for opposition against the bill to mount.

Tea party Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, who played a lead role last year in goading House Republicans into shutting down the government over what they call "Obamacare," is urging House members to hold out for a spending bill that lasts until March rather than early December. That would ensure that the next round of fiscal negotiations takes place after a new Congress is sworn in possibly with Republicans in control of the Senate.

Some House conservatives who met with Cruz over pizza on Tuesday have embraced his strategy.

The rest is here:
Tea Party Discovers Political Reality, for Now

Related Posts

Comments are closed.