As budget cuts loom, is government shutdown next?

WASHINGTON (AP) — With big, automatic budget cuts about to kick in, House Republicans are turning to mapping strategy for the next showdown just a month away, when a government shutdown instead of just a slowdown will be at stake.
Both topics are sure to come up at the White House meeting Friday between President Barack Obama and top congressional leaders, including Republican House Speaker John Boehner. A breakthrough on replacing or easing the imminent across-the-board spending cuts still seems unlikely at the first face-to-face discussion between Obama and Republican leaders this year.
To no one's surprise, even as a dysfunctional Washington appears incapable of averting a crisis over economy-rattling spending cuts, it may be lurching toward another over a possible shutdown.
Republicans are planning for a vote next week on a bill to fund the day-to-day operations of the government through the Sept. 30 end of the 2013 fiscal year — while keeping in place the new $85 billion in cuts of 5 percent to domestic agencies and 8 percent to the military.
The need to keep the government's doors open and lights on — or else suffer the first government shutdown since 1996 — requires the GOP-dominated House and the Democratic-controlled Senate to agree. Right now they hardly see eye to eye.
The House GOP plan, unveiled to the rank and file on Wednesday, would award the Pentagon and the Department of Veterans Affairs with their line-by-line budgets, for a more-targeted rather than indiscriminate batch of military cuts, but would deny domestic agencies the same treatment. And that has whipped up opposition from veteran Democratic senators on the Appropriations Committee. Domestic agencies would see their budgets frozen almost exactly as they are, which would mean no money for new initiatives such as cybersecurity or for routine increases for programs such as low-income housing.
"We're not going to do that," said Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa. "Of course not."
Any agreement needs to pass through a gantlet of House tea party conservatives intent on preserving the across-the-board cuts and Senate Democrats pressing for action on domestic initiatives, even at the risk of creating a foot-tall catchall spending bill.
There's also this: GOP leaders have calculated that the automatic cuts arriving on Friday need to be in place in order for them to be able to muster support from conservatives for the catchall spending bill to keep the government running. That's because many staunch conservatives want to preserve the cuts even as defense hawks and others fret about the harm that might do to the military and the economy. If the automatic cuts are dealt with before the government-wide funding bill gets a vote, there could be a conservative revolt.
"The overall sequester levels must hold," said Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Calif.
Little to no progress has been made so far between House and Senate leaders and the White House, and given the hard feelings engulfing Washington, there's no guarantee that this problem can be solved, even though the stakes — a shutdown of non-essential government programs after March 27 — carry more risk than the across-the-board cuts looming on Friday.
The funding plan for the rest of the fiscal year will be a main topic at the White House meeting on Friday, the March 1 deadline day for averting the across-the-board cuts.
Obama, speaking to a group of business executives Wednesday night, said the cuts would be a "tumble downward" for the economy, though he acknowledged it could takes weeks before many Americans feel the full impact of the budget shrinking.
The warring sides in Washington have spent this week assigning blame rather than seeking a bipartisan way out. In a glimpse of the state of debate on Wednesday, Republicans and the White House bickered over whether the cuts would be under way by the time Friday's meeting started. A spokesman for Boehner said they would be in place; the White House countered that Obama would in fact have until midnight Friday to set them in motion.
The cumbersome annual ritual of passing annual agency spending bills collapsed entirely last year — not a single one of the 12 annual appropriations bills for the budget year that began back in October has passed Congress — and Congress has to act by March 27 to prevent a partial shutdown of the government.
By freezing budgets for domestic agencies, the Republican plan would deny an increase for a big cybersecurity initiative, additional money to modernize the U.S. nuclear arsenal and money to build new Coast Guard cutters. GOP initiatives such as more money for the Small Business Administration or fossil fuels research would be hurt as well, but there's little appetite for the alternative, which is to stack more than $1 trillion worth of spending bills together for a single up-or-down vote.
But the GOP move to add the line-by-line spending bills for the Pentagon and veterans' programs to the catchall spending bill would give the military much-sought increases for force readiness and the Veterans Administration additional funding for health care.
That approach has few fans in the White House, which is seeking money to implement Obama's signature efforts to overhaul financial regulation and the nation's health care system, or within the Democratic Senate, where members of the Appropriations Committee want to add a stack of bills covering domestic priorities such as homeland security, NASA and federal law enforcement agencies like the FBI.
"You need balance," said Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. "We feel as strongly about the domestic side as we do defense."
The catchall spending measure, known as a continuing resolution or CR inside Washington, was originally seen as a potential must-pass measure to avert Friday's cuts or make them less severe. But no serious talks to avert the cuts have been under way.
On Thursday, Democrats will force a vote on a measure that would forestall the automatic cuts through the end of the year, replacing them with longer-term cuts to the Pentagon and cash payments to farmers and installing a minimum 30 percent tax rate on income exceeding $1 million. But that plan is virtually certain to be toppled by a GOP-led filibuster vote.
Republicans in turn are considering offering a measure that would give Obama authority to propose a rewrite to the 2013 budget to redistribute the cuts. Obama would be unable to cut defense by more than the $43 billion reduction that the Pentagon currently faces, and would also be unable to raise taxes to undo the cuts. The GOP plan would allow a resulting Obama proposal to go into effect unless Congress passed a resolution to overturn it.
The idea is that money could be transferred from lower-priority accounts to accounts funding air traffic control or meat inspection. But the White House says that such moves would offer only slight relief. At the same time, however, it could take pressure off of Congress to address the sequester.
In the House, where Republicans in the past Congress passed legislation to replace the cuts, Boehner has said it's now up to Obama and the Senate to figure a way out. The Senate never took up the House-passed bills, which expired when the new Congress was seated in January.
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.
With these senators not working together to stop this disaster that's about to befall our country all of these senators should be arrested and jailed for treason, destroying our country from within. they should ALL be tried including bonher and either put in prison for 50 years or shot by firing squad like any other terrorist because that's what they are, putting thousands of people out of work and causing untold distruction to programs to help people this should NEVER BE ALLOWED ...... EVER. Â
Don't worry. Be happy. Obama has your back you can Twitter on it. He goes now to.prepare a place for you. A FEMA camp! Like camping? OK gotta go, can't miss Ellen and Dr Phil...
WAIT JUST A MINUTE HERE....The House passed 2 bills last year to avoid the whole Sequester scenario. They went to HARRY REID'S SENATE and got used as coasters for the Dem's/Liberals glasses of Kool-Aid along with the other 35 bills the House passed to cut spending.
HARRY REID NEVER BROUGHT THEM TO THE SENATE FLOOR FOR A VOTE. When will the occupier types figure out blaming Congress isn't the problem - when in fact it is the WH and the Senate.
Harry Reid is the OBSTRUCTIONIST, Nero-Obamaâs lap-dog and goon for sale.....not the House Republicans or the Senate Republicans.
Coffee & jelly beans.......The media won't tell the people that, they want to make conservatives the bad guys and all you of the 47% should be ashamed of your rear-kissingâ¦..
Why would they do anything else I ask? See how quickly the white house threw Woodward under the bus for "outing" the truth and the president on his bald-faced lies? Anymore, "journalists" in the mainstream media are either lapdogs for the liberal elite or looking for new careers.
Obamaâs time in office will be remembered by historians: crisis followed by crisis, followed by another crisis ad nausea. All he does is pander to his quisling press and useful idiots, hot air is his stock in trade. If not for his teleprompter he'd be rendered totally useless .....
Austerity has failed in every nation that has imposed it. It increases unemployment and slows growth. Great Britain managed to cut its way back into recession.
The ironic thing is this: Austerity also increases the ratio of debt to GDP. In other words, it makes the nation's debt problem worse.
http://www.voxeu.org/article/panic-driven-austerity-eurozone-and-its-implications
"The proposed spending reductions amount to less than 0.03% of our gross domestic product. If our economy can't survive spending cuts of that size, we truly are Greece." Â - - Â
Further reading can be found at  - -  The Fairy Tale on Spending Cuts. - - http://www.cnn.com/2013/02/22/opinion/tanner-spending-cuts/index.html?hpt=hp_bn7
Obama (conveniently) forgets that he took the sequester - campaign-style - to the American people as a 'positive solution' - a 'down payment' to our debt. Â Â http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/07/31/president-obama-speaks-support-bipartisan-deal-reduce-deficit-and-raise-debt-limit
Let the cuts happen. The US needs to be fiscally responsible and the debt has got to stop growing.
Of course that will never happen since the politicians would never get reelected because the voters just want the government to spend. So the politicians will cave in and the debt will get bigger and bigger.
Soon the debt will crush us and the situation for us will be so much worse that cutting now but the ignorant masses don't understand that which is why we will fail as a nation.
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@Dr. Rawdog @RalphCramden  Fear not...... If/When the economy ever takes off ...... so will the hyper-inflation.  Â
@kramr You folks been predicting hyper-inflation striking any day now for four years. It was going to strike when the Stimulus passed, then when quantitative easing started, then when QE ended, then when QE2 started then when QE2 ended, then if Obama was re-elected...Â
The President loves a good crisis - illegal alien felons let loose on society ala Castro, Carter.Â
Furthers agendas.
"With big, automatic budget cuts about to kick in..."
The media is clearly complicit in this farce. Where, in any budget, does a 2 1/2% cut qualify as big? Only when you're trying to help the President's agenda.
I wish it would shut down.
I find it curious that the media has never reallsin gs going with CR's
What part of being SEVENTEEN TRILLION DOLLARS Â in the hole and STILL BORROWING Â 40 cents+/- of every dollar the fed is spending do they not understand. Â
here is what  just one trillion looks like visually with $100 bills
http://www.dailycognition.com/index.php/2009/03/25/what-1-trillion-dollars-looks-like-in-dollar-bills.html
@kramr I find "reallsin gs going with CR's" curious too.  When I use GoogleTranslate on that, which language should I choose?  ;-)