Bobby Jindal, Nikki Haley lead Republican charge against Obama
Published: 26th February 2013 03:47 PM | Last Updated: 26th February 2013 03:47 PM | A+A A-

With no deal in sight on
mandated across-the-board forced spending cuts, President Barack Obama
painted a grim picture only to be accused by Republicans, led by two
Indian-American governors, of scaremongering.
"While you are in
town, I hope that you speak with your congressional delegation and
remind them in no uncertain terms exactly what is at stake and exactly
who is at risk," Obama Monday told state governors gathered in
Washington.
"Because here's the thing. These cuts do not have to
happen. Congress can turn them off any time with just a little bit of
compromise."
The President's plea to the National Governors
Association at the White House was part of his latest push to pressure
Congress to avoid what is called 'sequestration' - $85 billion in
spending cuts this year and $1.2 trillion through fiscal 2021 - that
kicks in Friday.
Part of a 2011 deal to increase America's debt
limit, the cuts, half in defence and half in non-defence programmes,
were deliberately designed to be painful to make the Congress act on the
nation's mounting deficit.
Leading the critics charge that the
White House is exaggerating the potential impact of the budget slashing,
Louisiana's Indian-American Governor Bobby Jindal told reporters:
"Enough's enough."
"The president needs to stop campaigning, stop
trying to scare the American people, stop trying to scare states," said
Jindal, a potential 2016 presidential candidate.
Asking the
president to "show leadership," he said if the cuts were "truly
devastating," then the administration should cut future programmes, such
as Obama's signature healthcare measures, rather than chisel away at
existing programmes.
In the same vein, South Carolina's
Indian-American governor Nikki Haley dubbed Washington as "psychotic" as
she criticised federal lawmakers for letting partisan bickering get in
the way of balancing the budget.
"I could not be more frustrated
than I am right now. How many more times are the governors going to have
to pick up the mess of Washington, D.C.?"
"How many more times
are we going to have to deal with these issues over and over again
because of the finger pointing and the blame game that keeps on
happening in Washington?" she asked.
In an obvious swipe against a
week long holiday taken by the Congress in the midst of the looming
crisis, and Obama's Presidents Day golf weekend in Florida, Haley said:
"No one should be going home. No one should be playing golf. No one
should be taking vacations."
"What they need to do is do what these governors do everyday," she continued. "We stay until we get it done."
(Arun Kumar can be contacted at arun.kumar@ians.in)