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Blame game for impending shutdown plays on - USA TODAY Posted: 29 Sep 2013 09:26 AM PDT WASHINGTON — Congressional Republicans showed no signs Sunday of relenting on their efforts to dismantle President Obama's health care law on a stopgap funding bill, setting the course for the first government shutdown in 17 years starting Tuesday. "The American people overwhelmingly reject Obamacare. They understand it's not working. The only people who aren't listening to the argument are the career politicians in Washington," said Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, on NBC's Meet the Press. Cruz, who led a 21-hour filibuster-style speech against the health care law, has been a leading GOP advocate for using the stopgap measure as leverage to extract concessions on the Affordable Care Act, which begins open enrollment for the health care insurance exchanges on Oct. 1. Cruz joined a chorus of GOP lawmakers on Sunday talk shows who sought to spread the political blame to President Obama and Senate Democrats if a shutdown occurs. "(Democrats) are the ones playing games. They need to act. They're the ones that are truly threatening a government shutdown by not being here and acting," said Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., the fourth-ranking House Republican. The Senate voted Friday to approve a stopgap funding measure through Nov. 15 after a week of debate. On Saturday, the House made a second attempt at dismantling the health law after their first attempt to remove spending for it in the funding bill failed. The House approved 231-192 an amendment to delay implementation for one year, as well as an amendment to repeal a 2.3% tax on medical devices enacted to help pay for the law. The medical device tax is expected to raise $29 billion over 10 years. The House also voted to extend the length of the stopgap bill to Dec. 15, and approved a separate bill to make sure U.S. troops continue to get paid in the event of a shutdown. Many parts of the 2010 health care law have already been implemented, including discounts for prescription medications and the provision allowing children under 26 to remain on their parents' health insurance policies. On Tuesday, the state websites where uninsured Americans can shop for and buy health insurance will open. Those without health insurance will be required to buy it or pay a penalty; those whose income is up to 400% of the poverty level will receive a federal subsidy to help pay for the insurance. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said the House's action was "pointless" and White House spokesman Jay Carney said it was "reckless and irresponsible" because Obama has already said he will veto any attempt to delay or defund the law in the unlikely event it reaches his desk. Senate rules allow Reid to knock down the two amendments with one motion to table, which needs only 51 votes and cannot be blocked by Republicans. House Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., said Sunday that Republicans were readying a third attempt on Monday if Reid rejects the amendments, as expected. "I think the House will get back together in enough time, send another provision not to shut the government down, but to fund it, and it will have a few other options in there for the Senate to look at again," McCarthy told Fox News Sunday. However, House Republicans' options on the eve of a shutdown are limited. The House could advance a stopgap bill that keeps the government open for a week to keep the health care fight going and the government funded. Republicans could also attempt to advance another provision affecting the health care law, but there is no sign it would meet a different fate in the Senate. House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, could put the "clean" Senate-passed funding bill on the House floor where it would likely pass on the support of House Democrats with some Republicans, but he is under political pressure from conservative lawmakers and allied outside groups to hold the line. Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill., told CBS's Face the Nation that the Senate will reject the House's latest effort and that he expects a shutdown will occur. "I'm afraid I do," he said. Durbin said Democrats were amendable to finding ways to reform the health care law, and acknowledged that many Democrats support proposals such as the medical device tax repeal, but he said the debate should happen independent of a bill to keep the government running. "I fully support that (debate), but let's sit down in a bipartisan and calm way, not with the prospect of shutting down the government or shutting down the economy," he said. |
All is right again for Todd Graham and Arizona State - USA TODAY Posted: 29 Sep 2013 08:45 AM PDT TEMPE -- Maybe nobody was harder on Arizona State football coach Todd Graham after the Sun Devils' debacle at Stanford than Todd Graham. In the wake of that 42-28 loss, the ASU coach first called the effort "disappointing," then "frustrating" and finally "catastrophic." Graham said he and his staff didn't have the Sun Devils prepared to win. But with USC coming to Tempe, he pointed out: "You go win this one, and everybody loves you again." The Sun Devils rekindled the flame Saturday night at Sun Devil Stadium, dumping the Trojans in a second-half onslaught during a 62-41 victory. Suddenly, that Stanford game looks like nothing more than a lovers' tiff that will be completely smoothed over if the Sun Devils deliver another bouquet when they see Notre Dame in Texas on Saturday. This was a game the Sun Devils had to win. After eight wins, including a bowl victory in his debut season, Graham ratcheted up expectations with talk about winning a Pac-12 title in only his second year. GO FIGURE: The weird, wacky and wow of the weekend But a loss would have left ASU 0-2 in the Pac-12, and they could have kissed their hopes for a berth in the Pac-12 Championship Game goodbye. "I told our guys we go forward or we go back," Graham said. "This game for our program was huge. We moved forward." Plus, it seemed as if the Sun Devils had barely broken camp before ASU's administration raised some eyebrows by extending Graham's contract. A loss to the Trojans would only have fueled the second-guessing. We would argue that Graham, because he has a contract heavy on incentives, remains a bargain by head-coach standards in a major football conference. In fact, ASU President Michael Crow recently said that incentive-based deals are the only way he will go. "We'll only pay our coaches median salaries and then give them incentives for winning," he said. "We will not pay these $5 million salaries. We will not do it — for which we get no credit." OK, we're giving him credit. GEORGIA: Rugged September closes with joy But even with an incentive-laden deal, there would have been a lot of questions if ASU had followed that performance at Stanford, in which Graham said the Sun Devils made "every mistake you can possibly make," with another stinker against the Trojans. At Stanford, the kicking game — a Graham priority — was a nightmare. The Sun Devils couldn't establish a run game or stop Stanford's. There were dropped passes, coverage errors in the secondary and even six penalties for 65 yards after the team had just four penalties for 25 yards in its first two games. In other words, that disciplinary stamp Graham placed on the Sun Devils in his first season was noticeably absent. Enter the Trojans, with a beleaguered coach Lane Kiffin (who was fired by USC early Sunday morning) and only 56 scholarship players available in Tempe on Saturday night because of injuries and scholarship restrictions stemming from the Reggie Bush mess. Five USC scholarship players already have been lost due to injuries this season. USC's offense had been largely ineffective, and the Trojans lost at home to Washington State. In fact, about the only bright spot early this season for USC had been the strength of a defense coordinated by Clancy Pendergast, the former Cardinals defensive coordinator during their Super Bowl season. So much for that. The Sun Devils rolled up 612 yards in total offense. Still, it's USC. The Trojans have cache. And they did arrive in town with a 3-1 record and victories over ASU in 12 of the past 13 meetings between the schools. USC: Lane Kiffin fired after 0-2 Pac-12 start The Sun Devils blew them out with a quick-strike burst in the third quarter and then kept pouring it on in the fourth. Running back Marion Grice scored four times, twice on runs and twice on pass receptions. Quarterback Taylor Kelly threw for 357 yards and three touchdowns. It might have been worse, but the Sun Devils failed to turn two turnovers in the final 6:41 of the first half into touchdowns, settling for two chip-shot Zane Gonzalez field goals. And ASU's defense yielded 128 yards to USC back Tre Madden and 122 to his backup Justin Davis. But, much as they did at Stanford, but only after it was too late, the Sun Devils counterpunched. They scored three touchdowns in a span of about four minutes, one a defensive score on safety Alden Darby's 46-yard interception return. Running back Marion Grice added another score, his third touchdown of the game, late in the third quarter on a 9-yard run. "I'm really proud of our guys, in particular our offensive line," Graham said. "I challenged them. I said we have to come off the football and knock these guys off the ball. That (USC defensive) team, the numbers they've had against the run, and we totally dominated them." Now, the Sun Devils suddenly have the chance to do something special. They face Notre Dame, a team that lost at home to Oklahoma on Saturday, on a neutral field in Arlington, Texas. Granted, it's going to be a pro-Irish crowd there, but it is another game the Sun Devils can win. So, after all of the hand-wringing following the showing at Stanford, the Sun Devils are going to get through their so-called four-game "gauntlet" against Wisconsin, Stanford, USC and Notre Dame no worse than 2-2. And if they beat the Irish, they'll be 4-1 overall and 3-1 in that difficult four-game stretch. What's not to love about that? Bob Young writes for AZCentral, a Gannett property GALLERY: ALL THE COLLEGE FOOTBALL ACTION FROM WEEK 5 |
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