Posted on 12/20/2018 11:50:33 AM PST by SMGFan
GOP senators emerged from the closed-door meeting in visible disbelief that President Trump is refusing to sign a seven-week stopgap measure to fund the government that cleared the chamber by a voice vote less than 24 hours ago.
Senate GOP leadership appeared confident on Wednesday that Trump would sign the stopgap, which will fund approximately 25 percent of the government, as long as they kept poison pill policy riders out of it.
But Trump, under fire from conservative pundits and lawmakers, reversed course Thursday.
You're ruining my life, GOP Sen. Susan Collins (Maine) joked to The Hill when told about the decision. No-I dont think the votes are [there], ugh, we cant have a government shutdown, period, she said. Its never good. How many times do we have to learn that?
(Excerpt) Read more at thehill.com ...
The point was prescient across the different threads dealing with the exact same subject, hence the reposts.
1. Vote $5B in the house in the few days while we still have a majority there.
2. Send the entire senate home because maybe we don’t have 51 votes there yet.
3. Government shuts down until senate returns.
4. House bill sits in senate’s in-box.
5. Senate returns with more Rs and fewer Ds.
6. Senate passes the house bill on roll call vote.
7. President signs the bill. Shutdown ends with his intended result.
Just Brilliant!
Churchill quote bump
Cheap labor = slaves.
Merry Christmas...troll.
Don’t shut it down, eliminate half the damned worthless federal gub mint.
Make those mutes they call employees get real jobs.
Oh look at little trebb still thinking about me.
How adorable.
But it was such a lovely fantasy... The Democrats have so many fantasies. Can't I keep my one under the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th?
Yes, I may be conflating things. I recalled the President had some constitutional power over Congress which was being overlooked and I recalled dim old memories of tales of Congresscritters (Senate vs. House should be similar) being compelled to return. I also recalled the fairly recent events of WI Rat legislators hiding out in IL and a previous episode of Rats from TX hiding out in OK or visa versa. And I dimly recall cases in which the executive branch provided assistance to Congressmen attempting to return to DC. What I found in the fine print of Article II wasn't precisely what I'd thought I'd find. Perhaps it is the legislative body that has the power to compel its members to return, but if the President can compel them into session the legislative bodies procedures to enable a session should be triggered in some way. But I can't parse Senate/House rules as easily as I can the Constitution. I'm confident John Adams, who IIRC wrote the initial Senate rules, wouldn't have missed such point.
Perhaps there is potential for compulsion in a quorum call and I can have my fantasy less directly, but I don't know the fine print of how that works or how its triggered. If Trump calls the Senate into session and only one shows up could he trigger action to compel the rest of his mates to return? I'd hope it wouldn't have to be called by the body's internal leader as I can conceive of Mitch hiding out in KY.
Indeed, it did--"classical."
Great list
Thanks for posting :)
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