CUDA wrote:the Senate by Harry Ried's direction has not passed a budget or even brought one to the floor for a vote for 4 years. which is a violation of the Constitution and is
ILLEGAL, and you think they are doing their job
First of all...
CUDA wrote:The Senate under Harry Reid's direction has not passed a budget or even brought one to the floor for a vote for four years, which is a violation of the Constitution and is illegal. And you think they are doing their job?
Now, when was the last time you gave the United States Constitution so much as a passing glance? Personally, I reread it frequently, like when I'm thinking about writing a piece about whether or not some legislation or behavior is Constitutional. It's
a brief read, amendments and all, and the text is public domain, so there's really no excuse for failing to at least double-check it before spouting off that something isn't Constitutional. Feel free to enlighten me if you do feel that you have an excuse for being deliberately ignorant about the supreme law of the land, because...
Omnibus budgets are not Constitutionally mandated. Neither house of Congress is required to put forward any legislation of any kind, nor take up any legislation sent to them from the other house. If an omnibus budget is to be put forward, since such a budget would necessarily relate to revenues, it would be Constitutionally required (Article I, Section 7, Paragraph 1) to originate in the House of Representatives, and
not the Senate.
You raised that last point in the thread about the
Affordable Care Act (invalid, though it was, since the ACA originated in the House), so I'm a bit surprised that the relevant text is apparently completely absent from your consideration now. I know you're just trying to echo Speaker Boehner's rhetoric, when he tried to pass the buck to the Senate, late last week, but you should know better. You and Boehner should
both know better. You should know better because you've previously demonstrated that you know the Senate doesn't have the authority to originate a budget. Boehner should know better, because he was the one who demanded a verbal reading of the Constitution, in its entirety, on the floor of the House, following his initial election as Speaker of the House.
And the budget legislation from May? That was the Ryan budget,
again. (You're welcome to
give that one a read too, but unlike the Constitution, this one's a long read, with a lot more required cross-referencing, so brew a pot of coffee, and prepare for a late night.) Paul Ryan puts it forward every year, like bloody clockwork, and it gets a party-line vote every year. It wasn't a serious proposal to avert the budget sequester, since a serious proposal would involve some kind of compromise to get it through a split Congress and avoid a Presidential veto. That legislation was a waste of time. Not only was Senate leadership was fully within its right to let the bill die, since it had less than no chance of passing the Senate on another, inevitable party-line vote, but the House should have known better than to waste four hours of floor time and god-only-knows how many hours of committee time on this doomed bill.
Don't lecture others about paying attention, when you're not doing terribly well at it, yourself.