Reports: Pentagon Is Ramping Up Plans for a Potential Military Operation Against Cuba
Senate Republicans Hold Firm in Motion to Rein in Trump's Iran Campaign
Scott Bessent Confirms Operation 'Economic Fury' Is Part of the Campaign Against Iran
Trump White House's Tax Day Message: We Saved the American People From the...
You Won't Believe Who Just Invaded Israel
This Is Why Law Firms Are Telling Asylum Seekers to Pretend They Are...
Mike Johnson Torches Pope Over Feud With Trump
The College Campus Antisemitism Problem Hasn't Gone Away
NYC Mayor Mamdani’s City-Run Grocery Plan Is Revealed, and the Receipts Already Make...
Omaha Police Shoot Knife-Wielding Woman and It Wasn't Her First Run in With...
Amid Rising Anti-Semitism in the US, Jewish Americans Are Turning to the Second...
JD Vance Responds to the Pope's Opposition to the War in Iran
Stephen Miller: Trump Just Reasserted American Power for the Next 100 Years
How Biden's DOJ Went After Pro-Lifers
Florida Nursing Assistant Sentenced to 9 Years in $11.4M Medicare Brace Fraud
Tipsheet

Boehner: Obama's Refusal to Compromise is “Just Not Sustainable”

Boehner: Obama's Refusal to Compromise is “Just Not Sustainable”

On Capitol Hill today, House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) delivered a brief statement about the stalled budget negotiations between President Obama and House Republicans in regards to funding the federal government and raising the debt ceiling.

Advertisement

“I [am] disappointed that the president refuses to negotiate,” he said.

“The House has passed four bills, four bills to [fund] our government,” he claimed, referring to the numerous piecemeal appropriations bills passed by the House of Representatives to fund essential government services. “[Each] of those four bills was rejected by the United States Senate.”

“Dozens of times [in the past] there have been negotiations over funding our government,” he continued. He recalled the budget talks between previous administrations and members of Congress -- during the Reagan, Bush and Clinton years, for example -- and how these elected representatives came together and negotiated a settlement. Historically, he added, raising the debt ceiling is the time for the legislative branch to implement “significant policy changes.” This is precisely what Republicans want to do. He then criticized the president for refusing to even come to the bargaining table.

Advertisement

Related:

PRESIDENT OBAMA

“So the president’s position, [saying] listen, 'we’re not going to sit down and talk to you until you surrender,' is just not sustainable,” he continued. “It’s not our system of government.”

He also explained the seriousness of the debt ceiling fight and why Republicans believe it’s a cause worth fighting for.

“We can’t raise the debt ceiling without doing something about what’s driving us to borrow more money and live beyond our means,” the Speaker intoned. “This isn’t about me and frankly it's not about Republicans. This is about saving the future for our kids and our grandkids.”

“[That] conversation ought to start today,” he said.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement