S&M on Capitol Hill

Some would argue that Republicans and Democrats in Congress make it a habit of torturing each other. But Senior Correspondent Mike Causey knows that they're rea...

Joke: What did the sadist do to the masochist? Punch Line: Nothing! Get it?

See, the sadist likes inflicting pain will the masochist likes receiving it, so if nothing happens everybody loses. Like right now. In Congress. Currently, and not for the first time, Republicans and Democrats in Congress — between vacations and breaks — are doing what they do best. Spending a lot of time getting nothing done. Trying to inflict pain, and blame, on the other side.

Last year, it was a series of furloughs, which cost impacted workers 20 percent of their weekly salary. That resulted in a massive number of appeals that the government had to hear and process. It cost a lot of time and money and in the end nothing happened, which is often the way government works.

The furloughs were followed by a governmentwide shutdown in which many feds were locked out of their offices — with pay — while others were forced to come into work. Since everybody paid, the shutdown was costlier than when everybody is working.

The furloughs were triggered by the sequestration process. Some agencies had them, others didn’t. Republicans accused Democrats of causing it. Democrats said it was the GOP-led House that was to blame.

In past shutdowns, Republicans more often than not have lost the PR battle with much of the public and most of the media. Whether that is right or wrong, it’s a fact.

This year, sequestration seems to have all but disappeared. Now the political battle is whether, when, and if, to fund the Department of Homeland Security while repealing a presidential executive order on immigration.

Republicans say making the immigration changes by EO was wrong and they want to eliminate them as part of the DHS funding package. Democrats say no, that the issue of the appropriation process.

DHS was supposed to run out of money last Friday at midnight. But the House and Senate extended the deadline through this week. And they may do it again.

Taxpayers — plus federal workers who have both starring and bit part roles — have seen this movie before. Unless director Woody Allen takes over with a surprise ending, the DHS will eventually be funded. If employees are locked out, about 30,000 to 40,000 will be sent home. Another 200,000 emergency or essential employees will be told to report for duty. Everybody, if the script holds, will be paid. But there could be some problems and, if there is some kind of natural or man-made disaster (can you say terrorists attack?) during any shutdown, that will provide fodder for the blame-game, S & M gang on Capitol Hill.

So we pretty much know what is going to happen. The question is when?

The only real question about the shutdown dance is when it will end, and which party represents the S and which is of the M persuasion?


NEARLY USELESS FACTOID

By Michael O’Connell

Donatien Alphonse Francois was the birth name of the Marquis de Sade. He assumed his more familiar title after the death of his father in 1797.

Source: Fun Trivia


More from Federal News Radio:

Most TSP funds rise in February
All but one Thrift Savings Plan fund made steady progress in February. The fixed income F Fund lost 0.91 percent for the month, not enough to shrink the gains it made in January, when it rose 2.13 percent.

Earth to House GOP: Messing with DHS ain’t governing
I think I know what the House Republican leaders feel like. Or at least what they should feel like. When I was a sophomore in high school, I was chosen to be the sports editor of the school newspaper. It was a big deal. A few seniors on the staff were not happy, and predicted the end of the world as we know it.

OGE rolls out Integrity public disclosure filing system
The Office of Government Ethics (OGE) launched Integrity, a new electronic financial disclosure program to help streamline public filings at executive branch agencies, on Jan. 1. Nineteen agencies have already begun using Integrity and more than two dozen others are working with OGE to implement the program.

Copyright © 2024 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Courtesy of: https://www.justice.gov/archives/olp/staff-profile/former-assistant-attorney-general-office-legal-policy-hampton-y-dellingerHampton Yeats Dellinger

    For federal employee justice, some continuity in leadership

    Read more