Eyal wrote:PeterZ wrote:The requirement to compromise should be applied to both sides. The Administration won't compromise at all. He wants to change the law to dely implementation of parts of the ACA. Fine. Yet, I see no bill in congress detailing the changes he wishes to make. If the law is written in such a way as to give him complete control of how health care is to be administered without even advice and consent of Congress, then it needs to be repealed. If the ACA isn't written that way, then the administration cannot change the law without having the changes passed by Congress.
FWIW, this discusses the issue.He is willing to delay the Business penalties in the aCA but not the individual manadate. Why not if they entire program isn't ready for implementation? Why can he not compromise and delay the individual mandate?
Supposedly, the delay was due to issues employers had with the reporting requirements, which don't apply to individuals.The Repubs have already allowed the Administration to avoid getting a budget approved. No budget was approved even when the House and Senate were controlled by the dems. That there was no budget has allowed the emergency spending levels inflated by TARP and the other emergency measures after the financial crisis to become baseline spending levels in the Continuing Resolutions. That is compromise for these fiscally conservative groups. Yet, the dems refuse to acknowledge that demand that those groups accept all the dems demands.
In the context of these types of discussions compromise means that those that disagree with the Administration need to begin agreeing or they are not compromising. Sorry but that doesn't sound like compromise to me.
As I understand, the "clean" CR is already a Democratic compromise, as it involves considerable cuts to the budget set forth by the administration (I can't find the reference now, but IIRC it was something on the order of $200 billion).
And honestly, in the Democrats' shoes would you yield on this point? They're being asked to defund a piece of legislation which is key to them in return for minor gains and the prospect of having a new fight (with another shutdown threat) in 6 weeks when the CR expires and right after that again for the debt ceiling. And then they get to repeat it all over again when the delayed date for the ACA implementation comes around (don't forget, the Republicans aren't trying to delay the ACA to improve it or solve problems - they've been quite open about their intention to get it stricken down one way or another. I might agree that the Democrats whould consider a delay if the Republicans placed something major on the table, but they haven't done that.
That we are even dicsussing the CRs as a baseline is a concession. The current CR is built on the extra 800 billion of TARP and war time defense expenditures at the end of Bush II. TARP was intended as a temporary measure and the war time spending is being redirected absent a budget to prevent that, both turned into a repeating baseline expenditure. As soon as those expenditures are inserted in a budget, they cannot be justified as on going programs. Yet, they are assumed as such in the CRs.
You want the ACA, get rid of the amount of dollars in expenditures which replaced the TARP program and war time military spending. Those are the types of concessions one expects to be discussed in a budget process. They aren't being discussed or even on the table. Heck, the entire budget process is being avoided like the plague by the Administration for just these reasons.
As for getting rid of a program that harms me politically, if it is not helping and not wanted by most of my constituents, then yes I would. Once elected my job is to legislate and govern not play pure politics. The problem is that our spending levels are being made for political reasons just as you cite here. That is not good at all.