The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US Senate approves budget deal, too late to avert shutdown

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WASHINGTON: The US Senate approved a budget deal including a stopgap government funding bill early yesterday, but it was too late to prevent a federal shutdown that was already underway in an embarrassi­ng setback for the Republican-controlled Congress.

The shutdown, which technicall­y started at midnight, was the second this year under Republican President Donald Trump, who played little role in attempts by party leaders earlier this week to head it off and end months of fiscal squabbling.

The US Office of Personnel Management advised millions of federal employees shortly after midnight to check with their agencies about whether they should report to work.

The Senate’s approval of the budget and stopgap funding package, by a vote of 71-28, meant it will go next to the House of Representa­tives, where lawmakers were divided along party lines and passage was uncertain.

House Republican leaders on Thursday had offered assurances that the package would be approved, but so did Senate leaders and the critical midnight deadline, when current government funding authority expired, was still missed.

The reason for that was a nine-hour, on-again, off-again Senate floor speech by Kentucky Republican Senator Rand Paul, who objected to deficit spending in the bill.

The unexpected turn of events dragged the Senate proceeding­s into the wee hours and under scored the persistent inability of Congress and Trump to deal efficientl­y with Washington’s most basic fiscal obligation­s of keeping the government open.

The shutdown could be brief. If the House acts before daybreak to approve the package from the Senate, there would be no practical interrupti­on in federal government business.

If it does not, the result would be an actual shutdown, the second of 2018, after a three-day shutdown in January.

Paul said during his marathon speech, which strained fellow senators’ patience, that the twoyear budget deal would “loot the Treasury.”

The bill would raise military and domestic spending by almost US$300 billion over the next two years.

With no offsets in the form of other spending cuts or new tax revenues, that additional spending would be financed by borrowed money.

The budget part of the package was a bipartisan attempt by Senate leaders to end for many months, at least beyond November’s midterm congressio­nal elections, the fiscal policy quarrels that increasing­ly consume Congress.

But the deficit spending in the bill would add more red ink to Washington’s balance sheet and further underscore a shift in Republican thinking that Paul was trying to draw attention to.

Once known as the party of fiscal conservati­sm, the Republican­s and Trump approved a sweeping tax overhaul bill in December that will add an estimated US$1.5 trillion to the US$20 trillion national debt over 10 years.

“I ran for office because I was very critical of President Obama’s trillion-dollar deficits,” Paul said.

“Now we have Republican­s hand in hand with Democrats offering us trillion-dollar deficits. I can’t ... in good faith, just look the other way because my party is now complicit in the deficits. Really who is to blame? Both parties,” he said.

Paul voted for the deficitfin­anced tax bill in December.

The shutdown in Washington came at a sensitive time for financial markets. Stocks plunged on Thursday in New York on heavy volume, throwing off course a nearly nine-year bull run.

The S&P 500 slumped 3.8 per cent.

Markets barely flinched at the last shutdown in January, but that was before a dizzying selloff that started on Jan 30 amid concerns about inflation and higher interest rates.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-NY) (left) and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) walk side-by-side to the Senate Chamber at the US Capitol in Washington, DC.The two leaders announced they had reached agreement on a 2-year budget...
— AFP photo Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-NY) (left) and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) walk side-by-side to the Senate Chamber at the US Capitol in Washington, DC.The two leaders announced they had reached agreement on a 2-year budget...

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