WASHINGTON - Military readiness will be threatened. So will food inspections, teaching jobs, mental health services and more, all because of the automatic spending cuts due to take effect on March 1.
Congress, though, has left the building.
Lawmakers are off until Feb. 25 for their Presidents Day recess. That leaves four days to find a way to avoid automatic spending reductions, called a sequester, that the White House warns will "threaten thousands of jobs and the economic security of the middle class."
Each side says it's the other guy's fault they're not staying.
Republicans aren't being serious about finding solutions, said Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., and "you need two willing partners."
Republicans counter that it's those stubborn Democrats who won't budge. Senate Democrats offered an alternative on Thursday and four hours later left for 10 days.
See, said Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. "Liberals sit on their hands until the last minute," he said. "They offer some gimmicky tax hike bill designed to fail -- then blame everyone else when it does."
Congress' approval rating has had trouble topping 15 percent, and members are hardly fatigued. The 113th Congress, which convened Jan. 3, spent 10 days in session last month. Some get annoyed when asked why the recess is needed.