The Borneo Post

Congress approves funding stopgap, averts govt shutdown

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WASHINGTON: TheUSCongr­ess, facing an end- of-week deadline, passed a funding stopgap measure Thursday that averts a government shutdown and provides lawmakers and President Donald Trump with breathing room to strike a 2018 budget deal.

The Senate easily passed the bipartisan measure that funds government until Dec 22, by a vote of 81 to 14.

It occurred just hours after the House of Representa­tives did the same.

The bill heads to the White House for the president’s signature ahead of the midnight deadline. But with a shutdown crisis prevented — at least for now — a heated battle could lay ahead.

Trump will need to work with Democrats and his fellow Republican­s in the coming weeks to thrash out a budget plan for fiscal year 2018 that earns the support of lawmakers battling over policy and spending priorities.

The Republican Party controls both chambers of Congress, but in the Senate they will need at least a handful of Democratic votes in order to pass the spending bill.

While the two sides share some common goals, such as funding the programme that provides health insurance for millions of children, they remain divided on issues like the level of military funding compared to that for domestic programmes.

Democratic and Republican leaders huddled with Trump at the White House before the Senate vote.

“We hope we can come to an agreement on 2018 spending. We’re here in the spirit of ‘ Let’s get it done.” top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer said.

Senate Democrats earlier had threatened to block progress unless they won concession­s from Republican­s on a number of issues, notably the fate of hundreds of thousands of young immigrants who came to the US as children.

Trump’s predecesso­r, Barack Obama, protected the so- called ‘ Dreamers’ from expulsion through an executive order.

Trump rescinded that order, but then told Congress to craft a legal solution within the next six months.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said passage of the Dream Act protecting young immigrants was a top priority.

But White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said Republican­s were angling for separate talks on immigratio­n.

Trump, House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell “stressed that negotiatio­ns on immigratio­n should be held separately on a different track, and not as part of the government funding bill,” she told reporters.

With the Trump administra­tion seeking to boost military spending for 2018, Pelosi said Democrats wanted to match those hikes on the domestic side.

“Our fight is to bring up the domestic agenda to parity” with military spending increases, she said.

Democrats supported several bipartisan priorities including funding opioid abuse prevention, improving conditions for veterans, and disaster relief funding. — AFP

We hope we can come to an agreement on 2018 spending. We’re here in the spirit of ‘Let’s get it done’. Chuck Schumer, top Senate Democrat

 ??  ?? Franken departs the US Capitol with his wife Franni after announcing his resignatio­n in Washington, US. — Reuters photo
Franken departs the US Capitol with his wife Franni after announcing his resignatio­n in Washington, US. — Reuters photo

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