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President Barack Obama talks about the budget, Tuesday, April 5, 2011, at the White House in Washington.
AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais
By ANDREW TAYLOR, Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama, showing growing
impatience, said Tuesday it would be "inexcusable" for lawmakers
to fail to fund the government through the end of the year and
cause a shutdown.
"We are closer than we have ever been to an agreement. There is
no reason why we should not get an agreement," Obama said
following a White House meeting with congressional leaders.
Appearing before reporters at the White House, Obama said that
House Speaker John Boehner and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
were to meet on Capitol Hill later Tuesday to continue
negotiations. If that meeting does not produce an agreement, Obama
said he would summon the pair back to the White House Wednesday.
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"Myself, Joe Biden, my team - we are prepared to meet for as
long as possible to get this resolved," Obama said.
Boehner, in a televised appearance right after Obama, said
Republicans also want to avoid a government shutdown but also want
to achieve the largest spending cuts that are possible. "We
believe cutting spending will help us create jobs in America," he
said.
Earlier Tuesday after meeting with Obama, Boehner had said there
was no deal with the White House and Democrats. And he warned that
House Republicans "will not be put in a box" of accepting options
they refuse to endorse.
Boehner has proposed an agreement that would keep the government
running for one more week and slash another $12 billion in
spending. Boehner has already orchestrated action by Congress to
pass a pair of stopgap bills, so far cutting $10 billion from an
estimated $1.2 trillion budget to fund the day-to-day operations of
government through Sept. 30.
Obama said he would only accept another short-term funding
extension, of two or three days, in order to get a longer-term deal
through Congress. But he ruled out a longer extension to allow
negotiations to continue.
"That is not a way to run a government. I cannot have our
agencies making plans based on two week budgets," Obama said.
"What we are not going to do is once again put off something that
should have been done months ago."
In a file photo, House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) speaks at a news conference in the U.S. Capitol on March 31, 2011 in Washington, DC.
Brendan Hoffman/Getty Images
Obama also said the budget should not be used to also attach
policy measures that aim to limit abortions or that seek to curtail
environmental protection regulations. He said that there was a
legitimate debate to be had about resolving questions of the
long-term debt and deficit and social safety net programs. "Right
now what we're talking about is six months remaining" on the
budget for the current fiscal year, he said.
The White House maintains that lawmakers from both parties have
been working off a target number - $33 billion more in cuts - for
days. But Boehner has publicly denied any such agreement, saying in
his statement that the $33 billion "is not enough" and accusing
the Democrats of pressing gimmicky budget cuts.
While the White House has been heavily involved in the budget
discussions, it has tried to maintain a public distance from the
talks, with Obama and aides repeatedly arguing that the spending
measure is an appropriations function of Congress, not of the
executive branch.
With the Friday deadline to avoid a shutdown approaching, the
White House has begun advising government agencies on the proper
steps in preparation for a shutdown of the government.
Republicans on Monday disclosed plans to instruct lawmakers "on
how the House would operate in the event Senate Democrats shut down
the government."
And in a memo to agency officials, the deputy director of the
Office of Management and Budget, Jeffrey Zients, urged agency heads
to refine and update contingency plans in the event negotiators
don't strike a deal by Friday's deadline.
Boehner's one-week plan could reassure tea party-backed
lawmakers who are among the most vocal in seeking to reduce the
size and scope of the government. It could also put pressure on
Democrats and the White House to offer greater spending cuts.
But there's no visible movement on an impasse over GOP policy
riders attacking Obama's health care and financial reform laws,
cutting taxpayer funds to Planned Parenthood and reversing a host
of Obama's environmental policies.
On a separate long-term track, Republicans controlling the House
have fashioned plans to slash the budget deficit by more than $5
trillion over the upcoming decade, combining unprecedented spending
cuts with a fundamental restructuring of taxpayer-financed health
care for the elderly and the poor.
House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., unveiled the
GOP budget blueprint Tuesday morning just as Boehner, R-Ohio,
headed to the White House for the meeting with Obama, Vice
President Joe Biden and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of
Nevada, his chief nemesis in Congress.
Ryan's program also includes a controversial proposal to convert
the traditional Medicare program for the aged into a system by
which private insurers would operate plans approved by the federal
government.
Current Medicare beneficiaries or workers age 55 and older would
stay in the existing system.
At the same time, Republicans propose to sharply cut projected
spending on the Medicaid state-federal health program for the poor
and disabled and transform it into a block grant program that gives
governors far less money than under current estimates, but
considerably more flexibility.
(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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President Barack Obama talks about the budget, Tuesday, April 5, 2011, at the White House in Washington.
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