Saturday, September 30, 2023

Blog: US government hours from shutdown, funding chaos

Blog

US government hours from shutdown, funding chaos


The US government on Saturday was hours from shutting down after the far right of the Republican Party scuppered final attempts at a temporary budget agreement, throwing into doubt everything from access to national parks to Washington's massive support for Ukraine.


The closure of all but critical government services, set to start after midnight Saturday (0400 GMT Sunday) if lawmakers fail to reach a deal, would be the first since 2019 -- immediately delaying salaries for millions of federal employees and military personnel.


The two chambers of Congress are deadlocked, with a small group of Republicans in the House of Representatives pushing back against stopgap measures that would at least keep the lights on.


On Friday, House Republicans defeated a plan proposed by their own leader, Speaker Kevin McCarthy, to keep funds flowing, deepening the sense of growing chaos within the party ahead of 2024 elections where hard-right former president Donald Trump hopes to return to the White House.


The White House Office of Management and Budget's director Shalanda Young said there was "still a chance" of avoiding a shutdown if Republicans could end internal divisions.


And White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre made clear that President Joe Biden, who is seeking a second term in 2024, did not intend to wade in.


"The conversation needs to happen between Speaker McCarthy and his caucus. That's the fix, that's the chaos that we're seeing," she said.


Speaking to the news outlet ProPublica on Friday, Biden said McCarthy has made "a terrible bargain. In order to keep the speakership, he's willing to do things that he, I think, he knows are inconsistent with the constitutional processes."


McCarthy, however, blamed Democrats, saying they are the ones blocking a solution.


- Big question on Ukraine -


All critical government services will remain functioning. However, a shutdown would mean the majority of national parks, for example -- from the iconic Yosemite and Yellowstone in the west to Florida's Everglades swamp -- would be closed to public access beginning Sunday.


With student loan payments resuming in October, officials also said Friday that key activities at the Federal Student Aid office would continue for a couple of weeks.


But a prolonged shutdown could cause bigger disruptions.


A shutdown "unnecessarily" places the world's largest economy at risk, White House National Economic Council Director Lael Brainard told CNBC.


Risks that could percolate through the wider economy include air travel delays, with air traffic controllers asked to work without pay.


Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned a closure could also delay infrastructure improvements.


"In the immediate term, a government shutdown will only reduce GDP by 0.2 percentage points each week it lasts," said a report released Friday by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a think tank.


"However, halting critical trade functions of the United States will also undermine the United States' overall credibility as a commercial partner, impede ongoing negotiations and hinder export control enforcement capabilities," the report added.


The mess casts a growing shadow over Biden's policy of arming and funding Ukraine in its desperate war against the Russian invasion. For Republican hardliners behind the derailment of a new budget, stopping aid to Ukraine is a key goal.


Most Republican members of Congress continue to support US backing for Ukraine, but the shutdown will at minimum raise questions over the political viability of renewing the multibillion-dollar flow of assistance.


Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Blog; Andrews Leaves a Winner

Blog




Andrews Leaves a Winner

By Cory Bernardi

27 Sept 2023


Hi there,


While many politically right-of-centre Australians would be cheering the resignation of Victorian Premier Dan Andrews, the bloke leaves as a winner.


He won three elections and ran Victoria with an iron fist while misusing buckets of taxpayers money.


His government was mired in corruption scandals and linked to the largest number of COVID deaths in Australia. He ran Victoria into record debt while imposing new and outrageous taxes targeting his non-supporters.


On top of that, Andrews pursued a radical social agenda on euthanasia, abortion and drug use.


It's incredible to think he was largely untouched by Victoria's Liberal opposition despite the target-rich environment.


That's why he is a winner.


He leaves on his terms, is off the hook on his COVID accountability and, while leaving Victoria in a parlous state, he has a taxpayer funded statue in his honour.


It says a lot about politics and the media in Victoria that he leaves virtually unscathed.


The opposition didn't lay a glove on Andrews. He suffered more damage from internal Labor foes than his political opponents.


As I have said before, where the adversarial politics of accountability fails, it falls to the media to do their job of exposing bad actions and policies.


Unfortunately the media in Victoria failed too.


They repeatedly failed to ask the hard questions during Andrew's rein and were particularly sycophantic during the COVID pandemic.


So while Andrews emerges a winner, we are all losers as a result.


The template for authoritarian politics is now set. Politicians have learned that they can get away with almost anything as long as they keep the media on side.


They act as the gatekeepers to shaping public opinion and their omissions are even more effective than their exposes.


Where the mainstream media fails, the independent media often succeeds.


However, these revelations are usually dismissed as conspiracy theories or misinformation by those with a vested interest in outcome.


We've seen that with propaganda outlets like their ABC, the biased fact-checkers and the tech titans.


Thanks to Senator Alex Antic and his Freedom of Information requests, we also know that government has a role in censoring content they deem inappropriate.


So the two most untrustworthy public voices - politicians and a biased media - are trying to close down access to the truth through alternative outlets.


That only makes those outlets even more important.


Have a great day.


Cory