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SCOTUS skeptical that state abortion bans conflict with federal health care law; Iowa advocates for immigrants push back on Texas-style deportation bill; new hearings, same arguments on both sides for ND pipeline project; clean-air activists to hold "die-in" Friday at LA City Hall.

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"Squad" member Summer Lee wins her primary with a pro-peace platform, Biden signs huge foreign aid bills including support for Ukraine and Israel, and the Arizona House repeals an abortion ban as California moves to welcome Arizona doctors.

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The urban-rural death divide is widening for working-age Americans, many home internet connections established for rural students during COVID have been broken, and a new federal rule aims to put the "public" back in public lands.

Coming Budget Fights Could Reignite Shutdown Standoffs

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Monday, October 5, 2015   

CHARLESTON, W. Va. - A government shutdown has been delayed at least until December, but a number of budget fights remain. A temporary agreement over funds for Planned Parenthood delayed the shutdown, but battles over automatic spending cuts and a federal debt limit are warming up.

Lindsay Koshgarian, research director with budget watchdog National Priorities Project, says those could turn into shutdown standoffs and the Planned Parenthood issue could return.

"There are about 30 members of the House of Representatives who have said that it is so important to them to completely defund Planned Parenthood, that they would be willing to shut down the entire federal government to get that," she says.

Koshgarian says Planned Parenthood gets only a tiny sliver of the budget and isn't the only issue where the budget deadlines have been used for leverage ... issues like immigration and healthcare reform.

Koshgarian says a two-year agreement over automatic spending cuts known as sequestration has expired. She says that threatens funding for the military, education, highway and bridge repair and she says if Congress doesn't raise the federal debt limit, money for everything could dry up.

"But that's expected to happen sometime over the next month or two," she says. "If that does happen, that would mean the federal government would be unable to borrow any more money, and that could also result in a shutdown of a lot of essential government services."

Critics say using the budget for leverage creates a self-inflicted crisis. They say there are issues Congress should be dealing with, such as a highway trust fund that's running out of money. Plus Koshgarian says West Virginia's wobbly economy could be badly hurt by a shutdown. The state's citizens get a lot from federal services to vets and the elderly. And she says about 32,000 federal employees actually live here.

"In West Virginia, they earn about seven percent of all of the wages paid in the state. So as you can imagine, it would affect not just those workers, it would also affect the state economy," says Koshgarian.

The tactic led to a 17-day shutdown in 2013. Standard and Poors says that shutdown cost the U.S. economy an estimated $24 billion.


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