WASHINGTON (AP) — The government reopened its doors Thursday after a battle-weary Congress approved a bipartisan measure to end a 16-day partial shutdown and avert the possibility of an economy-jarring default on U.S. obligations.
Early Thursday, President Barack Obama signed the measure, which
the House and Senate passed late Wednesday, ending a brawl with Republicans who
tried to use the must-pass legislation to mount a last-ditch effort to derail
the president's landmark health care law and demand concessions on the budget.
The White House directed all agencies to reopen promptly and in an
orderly fashion. Furloughed federal employees across the country are expected
to return to work Thursday.
The impasse had shuttered national parks and monuments, and mostly
closed down NASA, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Interior
Department. Critical functions of government went on as usual and most federal
employees won't see their paychecks delayed, but the closure and potential default
weighed on the economy and spooked the financial markets.
There were signs early Thursday that the federal government was
slowly coming back to life. "We're back from the #shutdown!" the
Smithsonian Institution crowed on Twitter, announcing that museums would reopen
Thursday and the National Zoo in Washington on Friday.
Standard & Poor's estimated the shutdown has taken $24 billion
out of the economy, and the Fitch credit rating agency warned Tuesday that it
was reviewing its AAA rating on U.S. government debt for a possible downgrade.
Obama and his Democratic allies on Capitol Hill were the decisive
winners in the fight, which was sparked by tea party Republicans like Sen. Ted
Cruz of Texas, who prevailed upon skeptical GOP leaders to use a normally routine
short-term funding bill to "defund" the 2010 health care law known as
Obamacare.
"We fought the good fight. We just didn't win," House
Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, conceded in a radio interview. He was given
positive reviews from Republicans for his handling of the crisis, though it
again exposed the tenuous grasp he holds over the fractious House GOP
conference.
Yet Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona said the American
people clearly disapprove of how Republicans, and also Democrats and the president,
handled the budget gridlock.
"Hopefully, the lesson is to stop this foolish
childishness," McCain said Thursday on CNN.
The shutdown sent GOP approval ratings numbers reeling in public
opinion polls and exasperated veteran lawmakers who saw it and the possibility
of default as folly.
"After two long weeks, it is time to end this government
shutdown. It's time to take the threat of default off the table," House
Appropriations Committee Chairman Harold Rogers, R-Ky., said before the vote.
"It's time to restore some sanity to this place."
The agreement was brokered by the Senate's top Democrat, Majority
Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, and its Republican leader, Mitch McConnell of
Kentucky. They stepped in after the House was unable to coalesce around a Republican-only
approach Tuesday.
McConnell is up for re-election next year, and his tea party
primary opponent issued a statement blasting his role.
"When the stakes are highest, Mitch McConnell can always be
counted on to sell out conservatives," Matt Bevin said. In the House,
conservatives praised Boehner for tenacity.
The Senate approved the legislation by an 81-18 vote; the House
followed suit by a tally of 285-144, with 87 Republicans in favor and 144
against, breaking an informal rule that a majority of the majority party is
supposed to carry legislation. Democrats unanimously supported the bill, even
though it locks in funding at levels required by across-the-board spending cuts
known as sequestration.
The legislation would fund the government through Jan. 15 and
permit it to borrow normally through Feb. 7, though Treasury Secretary Jacob
Lew retains the capacity to employ accounting maneuvers to create wiggle room
on the debt limit into mid-March or so.
Most House Republicans opposed the compromise bill for failing to
do anything about deficits and debt.
"All this does is delay this fight four months," Rep. Mo
Brooks, R-Ala., said. "We need to get to the underlying cause of the
problem, which is our out-of-control spending and deficits, and fix it before
it's too late and we go down the toilet to bankruptcy because that's where
America is headed."
The bill's passage was only a temporary truce that sets up another
collision between Obama and Republicans over spending and borrowing early next
year. It's the second time this year that Congress has passed legislation to
increase the government's borrowing cap with few if any conditions on the
president, reversing a 2011 precedent in which the threat of default was used
to extract $2.1 trillion in spending cuts from a politically wounded Obama.
"With the shutdown behind us," Obama said after the
Senate vote, "we now have an opportunity to focus on a sensible budget
that is responsible, that is fair and that helps hardworking people all across
this country."
At the same time, House-Senate talks will begin on a broader
budget pact in hopes of curbing deficits and easing across-the-board budget
cuts that have slammed the Pentagon and domestic agencies alike. Such
agreements have proven elusive in the current era of divided government.
"No one thinks this will be easy" Senate Budget
Committee Chairman Patty Murray, D-Wash., said of budget negotiations. Murray
and House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., along with their ranking
minority members, immediately scheduled a breakfast meeting for Thursday to
break the ice.
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