From the AP/Yahoo:
“Averting government shutdown, Congress approves temporary
funding through the holidays”
Ending the threat of a government shutdown until after the
holidays, Congress gave final approval Wednesday night to a temporary
government funding package that pushes a confrontation over the federal budget
into the new year. The Senate met into the night to pass the bill with an 87-11
tally and send it to President Joe Biden for his signature one day after it
passed the House on an overwhelming bipartisan vote. It provides a funding
patch into next year, when the House and Senate will be forced to confront —
and somehow overcome — their considerable differences over what funding levels
should be. In the meantime, the bill removes the threat of a government
shutdown days before funding would have expired. “This year, there will be no
government shutdown,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said at a news
conference after the bill's passage.
The spending package keeps government funding at current
levels for roughly two more months while a long-term package is negotiated. It
splits the deadlines for passing full-year appropriations bills into two dates:
Jan. 19 for some federal agencies and Feb. 2 for others, creating two deadlines
where there will be a risk of a partial government shutdown. “Everybody is
really kind of ready to vote and fight another day,” Republican Whip John
Thune, the No. 2 Republican, said earlier Wednesday.
The two-step approach was not favored by many in the Senate,
though all but one Democrat and 10 Republicans supported it because it ensured
the government would not shut down for now. Sen. Patty Murray, the Washington
Democrat who chairs the Senate Appropriations Committee, voted for the bill but
said it would eventually “double the shutdown risk.”
The spending bill also does not include the White House’s
nearly $106 billion request for wartime aid for Israel and Ukraine, as well as
humanitarian funding for Palestinians and other supplemental requests.
Lawmakers are likely to turn their attention more fully to that request after
the Thanksgiving holiday in hopes of negotiating a deal.
House Speaker Mike Johnson, who crafted the plan, has vowed
that he will not support any further stopgap funding measures, known as
continuing resolutions. He portrayed the temporary funding bill as setting the
ground for a spending “fight” with the Senate next year. The new speaker, who
told reporters this week that he counted himself among the “arch-conservatives”
of the House, is pushing for deeper spending cuts. He wanted to avoid lawmakers
being forced to consider a massive government funding package before the December
holidays — a tactic that incenses conservatives in particular. But Johnson is
also facing pushback from other hardline conservatives who wanted to leverage
the prospect of a government shutdown to extract steep cuts and policy demands.
Many of those conservatives were among a group of 19 Republicans who defied
Johnson Wednesday to prevent floor consideration of an appropriations bill to
fund several government agencies. GOP leaders called off the week's work after
the vote, sending lawmakers home early for Thanksgiving. It capped a period of
intense bickering among lawmakers. “This place is a pressure cooker,” Johnson
said Tuesday, noting that the House had been in Washington for 10 weeks
straight. The House GOP's inability to present a united front on funding
legislation could undercut the Louisiana congressman's ability to negotiate
spending bills with the Senate. Republicans are demanding that Congress work
out government funding through 12 separate bills, as the budgetary process
requires, but House leadership has so far been forced to pull two of those
bills from the floor, seen another rejected on a procedural vote and struggled
to win support for others.
When it returns in two weeks, Congress is expected to focus
on the Biden administration's requests for Ukraine and Israel funding.
Republican senators have demanded that Congress pass immigration and border
legislation alongside additional Ukraine aid, but a bipartisan Senate group
working on a possible compromise has struggled to find consensus. Senate
Republican Leader Mitch McConnell in a floor speech pledged that Republicans
would continue to push for policy changes on the U.S. border with Mexico,
saying it is “impossible to ignore the crisis at our southern border that’s
erupted on Washington Democrats’ watch.” One idea floating among Republicans is
directly tying Ukraine funding levels with decreases in the number of illegal
border crossings. It showed how even longtime supporters of Ukraine’s defense
against Russia are willing to hold up the funding to force Congress to tackle
an issue that has flummoxed generations of lawmakers: U.S. border policy. Most
Senate Republicans support the Ukraine funding, said Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D.,
but he added, “It is secondary to securing our own border."
But the U.S. is already trimming some of the wartime aid
packages it is sending Ukraine as funds run low, National Security Council
spokesperson John Kirby said from San Francisco, where he accompanied President
Joe Biden for a summit of Asia-Pacific leaders. He said the pot of money
available for Ukraine is “withering away, and with it will be a deleterious
effect on Ukraine’s ability to continue to defend itself." Sen. Michael
Bennet, D-Colo., said in a statement that he voted against Wednesday's funding
package because it did not include aid for Ukraine. Schumer said the Senate
would try to move forward on both the funding and border legislation in the
coming weeks, but warned it would require a compromise and implored the House
speaker, Johnson, to once again work with Democrats. “I hope the new speaker
continues to choose the bipartisan approach,” Schumer said.
^ Congress has again “Passed the Buck” on Government
Spending.
They first did it back in October 2023 setting a November 17,
2023 new Deadline.
Now they have done it again setting Two New Deadlines of January
19, 2024 and February 2, 2024 – depending on the Government Agencies.
So America will needlessly be held-hostage again in a few months
wondering if the Shutdown will happen or not.
Nothing was included for Ukrainian Aid or Israeli Aid. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/senate-looks-speed-ahead-temporary-190349126.html\
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