Washington (AFP) - President Barack Obama demanded an end to a
three-day government shutdown he decried as a reckless "farce," piling
pressure on Republicans to climb down first on a budget impasse.
The
US Treasury meanwhile warned of "catastrophic" consequences if there is
no deal within weeks to raise the country's debt ceiling, and the IMF
chief said navigating a way out of that next crisis was "mission
critical."
Obama traveled to the Washington suburbs to lambast
Republican House Speaker John Boehner, who emerged from a White House
meeting late on Wednesday complaining that the president would not
negotiate with him.
"Take a vote, stop this farce and end this
shutdown right now," Obama said during a fiery speech in the Maryland
suburb of Rockville, which is home to many federal workers laid off in
the shutdown.
Branding the crisis a "reckless Republican
shutdown," Obama said that Boehner could reopen the government and get
hundreds of thousands of people back to work "in just five minutes" by
passing a temporary operating budget with no partisan strings attached.
"Speaker
John Boehner won't even let the bill get a yes or no vote, because he
doesn't want to anger the extremists in his party," Obama said.
The
government ran out of money on Monday, after Congress failed to pass a
budget, forcing authorities to send all non-essential workers home and
to close museums, monuments and national parks that are all popular with
tourists.
The Democratic-led Senate had turned back repeated
Republican efforts to pass a budget while defunding or delaying Obama's
health care law, which is a centerpiece of his political legacy and
reviled by Tea Party conservatives.
The talks at the White House
between Obama and congressional leaders made no progress, and there is
no sign that the dispute will be solved before dragging into a second
week.
The crisis rattled Wall Street on Thursday, where the Dow
Jones Industrial Average dropped 136.66 points (0.90 percent) to
14,996.48, amid ongoing jitters from the shutdown and nervousness about a
looming battle over Congress's responsibility to raise the $16.7
trillion US statutory borrowing limit.
If there is no resolution
before October 17, the government could begin running out of money to
pay its bills and an unprecedented US debt default could result.
But
Republicans are again demanding concessions on Obamacare before voting
to raise the debt ceiling, raising fears of unpredictable consequences,
which the Treasury said in a report Thursday could plunge the United
States into deep recession and rock global markets.
"In
the event that a debt limit impasse were to lead to a default, it could
have a catastrophic effect on not just financial markets but also on
job creation, consumer spending and economic growth," the report said.
"Credit
markets could freeze, the value of the dollar could plummet, US
interest rates could skyrocket, the negative spillovers could
reverberate around the world, and there might be a financial crisis and
recession that could echo the events of 2008 or worse."
International
Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde said finding a way out of the
debt limit dead end as soon as possible was "mission critical."
The
New York Times reported Thursday that Boehner had privately told House
Republicans that he understood the dangers of a default and was ready to
pass a debt limit increase with the help of minority Democrats if
necessary.
Obama has refused to negotiate with Republicans over
raising the debt ceiling, saying Congress is simply authorizing
borrowing to pay bills it has already run up and that offering
concessions would set a poor precedent for future presidents.
This time's different
In
the minds of key players on Capitol Hill, the government shutdown and
the debt ceiling fight have now merged into one massive political
crisis.
There was some talk among Republicans that Boehner may try
to craft a face-saving way out by reviving a stalled drive for a "grand
bargain" on debt and spending with Obama.
But there is skepticism
on the Democratic side that there is time to pull together a pact --
following repeated failed attempts in Obama's first term -- before the
debt limit deadline.
The president was meanwhile wrestling with
whether to cancel the rest of an already truncated Asia trip that would
see him leave on Saturday for the APEC summit in Bali, Indonesia and the
East Asia summit in Brunei.
Lawmakers meanwhile could pass a
measure on Friday which will see federal workers receive back pay for
the period when they have been off work since the shutdown.
Members
of the House of Representatives and Senate filed bills that would
ensure all federal employees receive retroactive pay for the duration of
the workstop.
"They deserve their pay, not financial punishment," House Democrat James Moran said in a statement.
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