NATIONAL
America held hostage: Shutdown news roundup
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Below is the roundup of news coverage and opinion from both Washingtons.
The highlight is today’s Seattle Times editorial, which calls out Washington states Republican members of Congress:
The milquetoast response of the Republicans in the state delegation is shameful. Instead of meekly going along with the crowd, they should push for a substantive legislative process. Washington voters will respect Republican representatives who attempt to lead and who promote principles of good government. This pack behavior of going along with the howling mob is cowardly, not conservative.
NATIONAL COVERAGE
► In The Hill — Republicans following Cruz’s playbook as crisis unfolds — House Republicans have more than taken a page out of Sen. Ted Cruz’s (R-Texas) shutdown playbook. They’re following it to a “T.”
► In today’s NY Times — Staunch group of Republicans outflanks House leadership — Their numbers may be small, but they are large enough to threaten the speaker’s job if he were to turn to Democrats to pass a spending bill that reopened the government without walloping the health law. Their strategy is to yield no ground until they are able to pass legislation reining in the health care law; if the federal government stays closed, so be it. And they believe they are winning.
► In The Hill — Business leaders dread debt-limit battle — Business lobbyists have been pushing Congress to raise the debt ceiling without drama or delay, but say the chances of that happening are shrinking with every passing hour.
LOCAL COVERAGE
► In today’s Seattle Times — Shutdown’s ripple effects in state: Workers sent home, tourists disappointed — Thousands of civilian federal-government employees throughout Washington state were sent home with the shutdown of the federal government Tuesday. A prolonged shutdown would eventually impact government operations from building maintenance to the courts.
MORE local coverage of the shutdown’s effects in today’s (Everett) Herald, Peninsula Daily News, Skagit Valley Herald, (Spokane) Spokesman-Review, Tri-City Herald, Wenatchee World, and The Oregonian.
SHUTDOWN OPINION
► In today’s Seattle Times — Time for Republican independence during shutdown (editorial) — The milquetoast response of the Republicans in the state delegation is shameful. Instead of meekly going along with the crowd, they should push for a substantive legislative process. Washington voters will respect Republican representatives who attempt to lead and who promote principles of good government. This pack behavior of going along with the howling mob is cowardly, not conservative.
► In today’s Olympian — GOP dead-enders on path to self-destruction (editorial) — Congress is approaching single-digit approval in the polls. Moderate Republicans should be standing up for Americans and against their colleagues from the far right. We believe this grossly irresponsible behavior will backfire on them in next year’s midterm elections.
► In today’s NY Times — John Boehner’s shutdown (editorial) — The Republicans’ reckless obsession with destroying health reform and with wounding the president has been on full display. And, as the public’s anger grows over this entirely unnecessary crisis, it should be aimed at a party and a speaker that are incapable of governing.
► In today’s Washington Post — House Republicans are failing Americans in their effort to kill Obamacare (editorial) — This Congress is failing. More specifically, the Republican leaders of the House of Representatives are failing. They should fulfill their basic duties to the American people or make way for legislators who will.
► In today’s NY Times — Why the health care law scares the GOP (by Eduardo Porter) — The argument that half the Republican Party has simply lost its mind has to be an unsatisfactory answer, especially considering the sophistication of some of the deep-pocketed backers of the Tea Party insurgency. There is a plausible alternative to irrationality. Flawed though it may turn out to be, Obamacare could fundamentally change the relationship between working Americans and their government. This could pose an existential threat to the small-government credo that has defined the G.O.P. for four decades.