Posted on 09/27/2013 10:50:21 AM PDT by cotton1706
The Senate on Friday voted to strip language defunding ObamaCare from a stopgap spending measure on Friday after a bipartisan vote to proceed with the measure.
The Senate voted on party lines to remove the ObamaCare language, in a 54-44 vote. GOP Sens. Orrin Hatch (Utah) and Jeff Flake (Ariz.) were absent for the vote.
The ObamaCare vote came after the Senate voted to proceed in a 79-19 vote, with 25 Republicans voting in favor of moving forward and 19 voting against.
The GOP votes represented a rejection of Sen. Ted Cruzs arguments that Republicans would be helping Democrats in moving the bill forward.
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A number of the Texas Republicans colleagues said it was better to get the bill back to the House to give the lower chamber more time to deliver an alternative funding measure.
The Senate is now voting on approving the bill. That vote will succeed, placing the ball in the House's court.
Its unclear what the House will do next.
Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) has not developed a clear plan, and the House GOP Conference plans to meet on Saturday to consider its options.
The government will shut down on Tuesday without a new funding measure.
Cruz, backed by Tea Party groups, lobbied his colleagues throughout the week to block the bill in order to prevent Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) from removing the ObamaCare provisions.
In the end, 19 of Cruz's colleagues backed him: GOP Sens. Jerry Moran (Kan.), Marco Rubio (Fla.), Richard Shelby (Ala.), Jame Risch (Idaho), James Inhofe (Okla.), Rob Portman (Ohio), Jeff Sessions (Ala.), David Vitter (La.), Rand Paul (Ky.), Mike Lee (Utah), Ted Cruz (Texas), Mike Crapo (Idaho), Mike Enzi (Wyo.), Deb Fischer (Neb.), Pat Roberts (Kan.), Tim Scott (S.C.), Dean Heller (Nev.), Chuck Grassley (Iowa) and Pat Toomey (Pa.).
Senate GOP leaders did not want to be blamed for quashing a bill necessary to avert a government shutdown on Tuesday, when funding is scheduled to expire. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.), who voted to advance the bill, argued earlier in the week that the legislation deserved to advance to a final vote because, as initially written, it would halt the healthcare laws implementation.
Invoking cloture on a bill that defunds ObamaCare, doesnt raise taxes and respects the Budget Control Act, it strikes me as a no-brainer, McConnell told reporters.
McConnell emphasized Friday morning that the Senate GOP Conference is unified in its desire to repeal the law, even if its members disagree over tactics.
Cruz and other Tea Party-affiliated conservatives argued that by agreeing to limit debate, Republicans would give Reid the power to radically rewrite the bill and pass it with simple majority votes.
Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), one of Cruzs allies, said that by voting to end debate and set up a final vote, Republicans would empower Reid to gut the House-passed resolution.
Everyone knows that the vote were about to take cloture on the House-passed continued resolution is essentially a vote to allow Democrats to gut the House bill, Lee said. Thats why every Senate Democrat is supporting it.
Cruz tried to rally his Republican colleagues by speaking on the floor for more than 21 hours over Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday morning.
The impassioned effort fired up conservative activists, who flooded Senate offices with calls and tied up phone lines but gained little traction with GOP senators, who grew increasingly irritated with Cruz as the week wore on.
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) scolded Cruz for comparing GOP leaders stance on defunding ObamaCare to former British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlains effort to appease Adolf Hitler.
I think its wrong and I think its a disservice to those who stood up and shouted at the top of their lungs that we cannot appease and that we must act, he said.
Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) on Thursday rebuked Cruz for delaying the votes until Friday morning, accusing him of playing to the C-SPAN cameras and giving the House less time to respond.
Reid in a floor speech on Friday criticized Cruz for holding up the Senates work.
Every minute that passes is a minute we get closer to a government shutdown, Reid said. But a bad day for government is a good day for the anarchists among us. ... So the question is, can we overcome the modern day anarchist?
The Senate also rejected a budget point of order against the bill in a 68-30 vote.
Sessions, the senior Republican on the Budget Committee, raised the point of order, saying the bill exceeds the 2011 Budget Control Act by continuing the current spending level at the annualized rate of $986.3 billion.
The fuse on the 2014 election bomb has been lit.
“Reid said. But a bad day for government is a good day for the anarchists among us. ... So the question is, can we overcome the modern day anarchist?”
I wish one of those guys whom he refers to as anarchists would show him exactly what that implies, personally and in technocolor.
GOPe holed below the waterline, again.
Remove the fake conservatives.
From The Washington Times:
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/sep/27/senate-defeats-cruz-filibuster-clears-way-obamacar/
so Bob Corker...Cruz stood up all night long for the media coverage?......arse....
Yep. Buh bye RNC. Time to work hard for conservative groups and candidates, only.
For sure, and CruZ said this exactly would happen and that was why he did not want a less than 60 vote.
For sure, and CruZ said this exactly would happen and that was why he did not want a less than 60 vote.
I’m pleasantly surprised. My Senator Portman, Ohio, voted with Ted Cruz.
If the GOP had shown a willingness to oppose Liberal policies, then 2014 might have turned out to be a good year for the Republicans.
But they didn't.
And it won't be.
McCain is right. The comparison is unfair. Unfair to Neville Chamberlain. In September 1938, he didn't understand what a monster Adolph Hitler would become. It took him less than one year to find out.
McCain, on the other hand, will apparently never learn.
I gave up on the Republican Party after 2008. . .
Un-FReepin-forgivable!
FReep You, John-ButtPain-McCain
As Pat and Stu were saying.. some of the No votes weren’t so much courage.. but moreso political posturing.
When some pols, possibly Portman, saw that it wasn’t going to pass and that they could still vote no, they did.
If it had been close he may have voted another way. But.. he still voted the right way so you have to give him credit.
Im so mad I can spit bullets. Swear to god
Either take a revote on original bill sent to the Senate from the House with no changes or declare Obamacare officially defunded. Either way, Obamacare should be DOA.
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