From NBC:
“Congress passes stopgap bill
to prevent a shutdown until March, sending it to Biden”
Congress passed a bill on
Thursday that would prevent a partial government shutdown this weekend and keep
federal funds flowing through March 1 and March 8. The Democratic-led Senate
voted 77-18 on final passage after considering a few amendments. The
Republican-led House soon followed suit, passing it by a vote of 314-108. The
bill now goes to President Joe Biden's desk to become law before the funding
expires Friday at midnight. It is the third stopgap bill since last September
as the divided Congress struggles to agree on full-year government funding
bills.
A recent deal between Speaker
Mike Johnson, R-La., and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., on how
much to spend in the new year has renewed hope of completing the process by the
new early March deadlines. But that is far from guaranteed as right-wing House
Republicans rebel against it. The first stopgap bill led to the ouster of Kevin
McCarthy, R-Calif., as speaker. His successor, Johnson, is seeking to avoid the
same fate by selling the conservative victories in the latest deal. Before the
Senate vote, Schumer inveighed against “a loud contingent of hard-right
rabble-rousers who thinks a shutdown is somehow a good thing." “In the
twisted logic of the hard right, the theory is if enough people feel the pain
of a shutdown, the hard-right can bully the rest of Congress into enacting
their deeply unpopular agenda,” Schumer said on the Senate floor Thursday
morning. “Bullying, intimidation, chaos. This is MAGA extremism in a nutshell.”
Around the same time, the House
announced that it would cancel votes on Friday in anticipation of a winter
storm and complete votes on the stopgap bill on Thursday. The bill would extend
the two-part government funding deadlines from Jan. 19 to March 1, and from
Feb. 2 to March 8. The funding bill is unrelated to negotiations surrounding an
immigration and national security supplemental bill that would provide aid to
Ukraine and Israel. It's designed to give appropriators more time to craft the
12 appropriations bills that fully fund the government using the newly
agreed-to spending levels. “We need just a little bit more time on the calendar
to allow that process to play out,” Johnson told reporters, saying he’s “very
hopeful” that Congress can pass all 12 measures. “We’ll see how this develops.
Certainly, we’re not going to have an omnibus," he said, referring to the
massive, last-minute spending bills Congress has frequently relied on.
"And that was a very important innovation for us to forge forward because
it’s no way to run a railroad.”
^ I’m glad this passed and a
Partial Government Shutdown is avoided again, but this should have been
resolved back in October 2023 and not pushed to March 2024. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/congress-set-vote-prevent-government-190903760.html
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