U.S. President Barack Obama gestures
while addressing a news conference in the State Dining Room at the White
House in Washington, October 2, 2015.
Reuters/Joshua Roberts
President Barack
Obama on Friday urged the U.S. Congress to take steps soon to fund the
federal government in 2016 and raise its nearly exhausted borrowing
authority, but acknowledged that Republican political turmoil in
Congress will complicate that."I
will not sign another shortsighted spending bill," Obama told
reporters, warning that a temporary budget patch approved this week by
lawmakers presents the risk of a new fiscal crisis before Christmas.
On
Wednesday, just hours before a midnight deadline when government agency
funds were due to run out, Congress extended current spending levels
through Dec. 11. That left only 10 weeks to set a budget for the fiscal
year ending on Sept. 30, 2016.
That deadline, and the need to raise the
government's debt ceiling expected in early November, loom as
Republicans struggle to find a successor for House of Representatives
Speaker John Boehner.
"I'm sure the speaker's race complicates these negotiations," Obama said.
Boehner
said last week he would resign from Congress on Oct. 30 after being
challenged repeatedly by hard-line conservatives in his own party. The
move triggered an internal battle for his job and other House leadership
posts in the Republican-dominated House.
Republican
Kevin McCarthy, the current House majority leader, remains the favorite
to replace Boehner. But some conservatives are cool to the Californian
and insist he lacks the votes to be elected, raising the prospect of a
prolonged fight.
McCarthy is being challenged by Representative Daniel Webster, former speaker of Florida's House of Representatives.
A
third contender emerged on Friday. Politico reported that
Representative Jason Chaffetz of Utah plans to launch a campaign, but
his office did not respond to requests for comment.
"I
don't think conservatives are going to rally around Jason Chaffetz,"
predicted Representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky, another conservative
Republican. Chaffetz alienated some House conservatives after he
punished one of them for failing to support leadership decisions.
If Republicans
were to deadlock on the choice of a new speaker, it is unclear whether
Boehner would stay in the job until the political dust settled.
The
longest speaker election in history took place in 1855, when it took
two months and 133 ballots to elect Representative Nathaniel Banks of
Massachusetts.
Obama urged Congress to carry out a smooth, quick debt limit increase to avoid wider economic damage.
"Historically, we
do not mess with it," the Democratic president said. "If it gets messed
with, it will have profound implications for the global economy."
Many conservative Republicans balk at raising the debt limit without a plan in place for long-term deficit reduction.
Obama
also wants to lift tough caps on federal spending enacted a few years
ago. Some conservative Republicans want to exceed the cap for the
military, but not domestic programs.
Congress
"can't flirt with another shutdown," Obama said. "It has to pass a
serious budget" and "get rid of some of these mindless cuts."
Sourced from reuters.com
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