The Prince George Citizen

Obama, Congress avert federal shutdown

- Alan FRAM

WASHINGTON — Avoiding the high drama of recent year-end budget fights, President Barack Obama signed legislatio­n Friday keeping government agencies open into next week, giving White House and congressio­nal bargainers more time to complete sweeping deals on taxes and federal spending.

Facing a midnight deadline, Obama signed the measure keeping government afloat through Wednesday just hours after the House used a voice vote to send it to him. The Senate approved the bill a day earlier, its easy sojourn through Congress underscori­ng that neither party saw reason to risk a government shutdown battle.

Talks were likely to stretch at least into the weekend over the environmen­t, Syrian refugees, guns and dozens of other disputes sprinkled across two major bills. One would provide $1.1 trillion to finance government for 2016; the other would renew around 50 expiring tax cuts for businesses and individual­s that, with additions, could swell to a 10-year price tag of $700 billion or more.

Disagreeme­nts remained but show-stopping, partisan quarrels were already resolved, lowering the decibel level of this year’s budget endgame. The overall $1.1 trillion spending total was previously cemented in place, leaving only spending details to finalize, and Republican­s decided to avoid shutdown brinkmansh­ip with Obama by omitting provisions dismantlin­g his 2010 health care law and halting Planned Parenthood’s money.

GOP lawmakers also attributed the lessened intensity to new Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., who replaced the ousted John Boehner, R-Ohio, this fall. They said they needed to finish this year’s work and focus on passing election-year bills in 2016 highlighti­ng GOP priorities on taxes and health care.

“There’s a honeymoon period in here,” conservati­ve Rep. Ted Yoho, R-Fla., said of Ryan’s recent ascension to the top House job. “And I think Paul’s articulate­d very well where we want to go.”

Leaders were hoping Congress would adjourn for the year next week after approving the two measures.

Republican­s wanted to insert language into the bills ending the four-decade ban on U.S. oil exports and curbing Syrian refugees from entering the U.S., a response to last month’s deadly attacks in Paris. They also wanted to roll back legal curbs on the financial industry, prevent Obama from easing ties with Cuba and block his efforts to fight air and water pollution.

Yet though Republican­s dominate Congress, the aversion of many GOP lawmakers to spending bills meant Democratic votes would be needed to pass the sweeping $1.1 trillion package. issue given life by last week’s mass shooting in San Bernardino, Cali.

No. 2 House Democratic leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland indicated on C-SPAN’s “Newsmakers” that Democrats could be open to bargaining on oil exports and gun violence research. But he expressed opposition to an effort by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., to lift campaign spending limits by party committees for candidates for federal office, saying, “I don’t want to say we can live with it.”

It was unclear if lawmakers would pull off a major tax bill with permanent extensions benefiting both sides or opt for a two-year extension of existing tax breaks.

Republican­s wanted business tax reductions for research and developmen­t and for equipment purchases to be made permanent. For their part, Democrats were seeking permanence for Obamapasse­d increases in tax credits for low-earning households, families with children and college students.

In another fight, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy and other California Republican­s blamed Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., for blocking a provision aimed at bringing more water to the state’s farm belt amid a severe drought. At a news conference, the Republican­s said Feinstein abandoned a deal in which GOP lawmakers had conceded to Democratic demands, including protection of endangered species.

Feinstein said the language likely would have violated environmen­tal law.

“I expect that by early next week we’ll have a bill that the state and federal government can sign off on,” Feinstein said in a statement.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin meets with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington on Thursday.
AP PHOTO House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin meets with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington on Thursday.
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