Posted on 01/02/2013 2:25:55 PM PST by jazusamo
Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) is signaling that at least one thing will change about his leadership during the 113th Congress: Hes telling Republicans he is done with private, one-on-one negotiations with President Obama.
During both 2011 and 2012, the Speaker spent weeks shuttling between the Capitol and the White House for meetings with the president in the hopes of striking a grand bargain on the deficit.
Those efforts ended in failure, leaving Boehner feeling burned by Obama and, at times, isolated within his conference.
In closed-door meetings since leaving the fiscal cliff talks two weeks ago, lawmakers and aides say the Speaker has indicated he is abandoning that approach for good and will return fully to the normal legislative process in 2013 seeking to pass bills through the House that can then be adopted, amended or reconciled by the Senate.
"He is recommitting himself and the House to what we've done, which is working through regular order and letting the House work its will, an aide to the Speaker told The Hill.
The shift could have immediate ramifications as Congress heads into its next showdown over raising the debt ceiling and replacing steep automatic cuts to defense and domestic spending that are now set to take effect in March. It will also impact other presidential priorities like immigration reform and gun control.
Republican lawmakers say they expect the House majority to draft and pass its own debt-ceiling proposal, which would then add pressure on the Democratic leadership in the Senate.
For Boehner in particular, it will be easier said than done.
The Speaker is ending his first term weaker than at any point during his two years with the gavel. He was unable to win enough Republican votes for his own fiscal cliff fallback plan last month, and in the final hours of the 112th Congress, watched as more than half of his conference including his two top lieutenants in leadership voted against the Senates tax compromise. Earlier Tuesday, party leaders failed to garner enough GOP support to amend the Senate bill.
And on Wednesday, he faced withering criticism from Republican House members and Gov. Chris Christie (R-N.J.) over his decision to scrap a vote on legislation providing relief to states damaged by Hurricane Sandy.
Republicans in both the House and Senate are determined to confront Obama over the debt ceiling, despite the presidents repeated vows not to negotiate with Congress over increasing the nations borrowing authority.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) issued a statement Wednesday making it clear that Republicans view the debt ceiling increase as an immediate opportunity to achieve significant spending cuts.
When Obama told Boehner in November that he wanted an increase in the debt ceiling as part of the fiscal cliff package, the Speaker replied: Things that you want in life tend to come with a cost.
Boehner and his aides have said the Speaker remains committed to a principle he first articulated in 2011 that any increase in the debt limit must be accompanied by spending cuts and reforms that exceed the amount of new borrowing authority.
The Speaker is also expected to resist Obamas push for another increase in taxes to offset the restoration of spending cuts from sequestration. As far as we're concerned, the tax issue is off the table, the Boehner aide said.
Conservatives, however, are likely to want even more.
Im looking for dramatic and drastic spending reductions, Rep. Jeff Duncan (R-S.C.) said Wednesday.
The influential editorial page of the Wall Street Journal on Wednesday urged Boehner to from now on cease all backdoor negotiations and pursue regular legislative order. Linking to the article, a top adviser to Boehner posted on Twitter: Thats the plan.
Another aide cautioned that Boehner is not cutting off all contact with the president. "It doesn't mean the Speaker isn't going to meet with the president or talk to the president" when appropriate, the aide said.
Duncan said he was encouraged by Boehners commitment in recent days to return to regular order, saying it was imperative that the House not simply accept bills driven by Democrats in the White House and the Senate.
We have a Republican majority. We need to pass Republican bills out of the House, Duncan said.
The Tears of a Clown...
Now, they generate paper for the Senate shredders, and Harry Reid tells them what they can have....and they ALWAYS go along with it.
They probably did more as a Minority in the House than they've done as a Majority, because Harry Reid and The Messiah just shove what they want up there asses, and they vote "YES!"
Chats at the White House over lunch....
When they compare tans (boner usually wins that contest)
Slow learner
I will be the most surprised FReeper ever if Bonehead is not re elected to the Speaker position.
Everyone...we are dealing with the Republican establishment here...Bonehead is in no jeopardy of losing his position.
Clinton said put ice on it, and you say you're done with one on one talks with the muzzie mulatto
phuque yoo both.
AFTER you pull the trigger you say oops?
Whoever suggested Alan West take over had a good idea. He’s better equipped than Boehner, I don’t think Obama could handle West as easy as he does Boehner. It would be a head on confrontation for sure, the same goes for Reid and Biden. I don’t see West as the usual insider political opportunist that permeates the halls of Congress. I wish he would move to another district, preferable in the SWF area.
I called both my Senators today....and told their “people” I’m done with the GOP-E. I’ve been a registered Pubbie forever....but I’m changing ASAP. And I’m suggesting to my family they do the same. I think most will do what I will do...as they aren’t at all happy either.
Translation: “I ain’t gonna get on my knees as a WH fluffer no more...”
Carole King: “It’s a too late’n, baby, it’s a too late’n now....”
He should never have had one in the first place. Too little, too late, GTFO Boner.
LLS
Eewwwh. Scary. I bet Obama’s shakin’ in his boots.
The blame for the fiscal-cliff debacle shouldn’t be laid solely, or maybe even primarily, at the feet of John Boehner.
As the article states, John Boehner left the fiscal cliff talks two weeks ago. At that point, there would have been no possibility of Obama saving us from going over the cliff unless HE compromised. However, who should come waltzing into the negotiations at that moment but Mitch McConnell?
Unlike John Boehner, Mitch McConnell could not have been more eager to meet with Obama, with Harry Reid, with Joe Biden. And at those meetings, Mitch McConnell caved in on tax increases and spending cuts; he agreed to the Senate bill that Obama wanted, and then it was sent to the House...and what could John Boehner have done then?
As bad as John Boehner might be as a Speaker of the House, he did as well as could be expected in the face of his fellow Republican, Mitch McConnell’s, unilateral sell-out on the fiscal cliff.
Boehner has no plan to give up ‘consulting’ with the mad Kenyan. He loves being in the spotlight far too much. Or, is that the tanning light?
He'd give the RATS fits and we could believe every word that came out of his mouth, know he'd do what's best for the country and uphold the Constitution.
Yeah. They played 18 holes. Boehner shot 107 and obama got 15. Boehner said, "Nice shooting, Mr. President!"
Six days later, Boehner said, "I think I got burned by the president!"
So it took the man who is 3rd in line for President two whole years to discover that you cannot trust a Cook County Democrat?
Was he AWOL during the first two years of the Obama regime?
Does he not have an intelligence gathering or research team?
Or is this just a ‘now that I’ve screwed the base and the country’ I finally got my head straight comment?
The bastard couldn't fool a 6 year old with that crap at this stage of the game.
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