And in 2006 then Senator Obama opposed raising the debt limit.
This gets brought up a lot, but the reality is that votes against raising the debt ceiling have been used for decades a way to voice protest to whatever is going on. In every case, however, it's been a single person voting against something that was guaranteed to pass in order to voice their objection to [X], where X may be the Iraq War, or whatever. To compare such individual votes to an actual, legitimate threat to block the raising of the debt ceiling is... silly.
While I disagree with the target (ACA), I could see tying the debt limit to passing a balanced budget. That is however not the objective.
I'd be down with that. It will never happen, however - certain folks have decided that they are entitled to unaffordably low tax rates, and certain politicians have been happy to tell them that they are in order to get ellected. We haven't seen a balanced budget since the Bush tax cuts, and until they are repealed, we never will. *sigh*
Grapevine from the hill indicating that default may occur because :teaparty. No, this is not a joke. They're actually willing to force a default and moderate Republicans are too afraid of the Tea Party to stand up to them.
What.
The President was correct in stating gerrymandering is the cause of a lot of these problems. Regardless of political party, Representatives are essentially chosen in the primaries, where the most radical of the candidates tends to get the most backing. Thus a moderate facing primaries in March for a November election has a more radical opponent in their home district right now.
I have a lot of problems with the Tea Party, but this ends up being the biggest. They preach patriotism and democracy, and we've watched them do everything they can to undermine democracy whenever it looks like the voters won't vote for them. They made history in 2012, first time that the party receiving fewer votes ended up with more seats in the House. Mandate my ass, they have a Gerrymandate.
There are the blatant voter suppresion efforts (Voter ID laws, restricting voting hours, etc), but there have been some slightly less obvious ones too. Most recently, they moved the Republican primary for VA Governor's race to a convention. Why? Because it looked like most VA republicans weren't going to vote for their guy. So they made sure they didn't get to vote. Now VA republicans have to choose between the Democrat and the Teaparty guy they didn't want.
I hope to God that they get punished for it when the election comes along, because that shit pisses me off.
/rant