Albuquerque Journal

Border wall, tunnel hold up spending bill

Most spending priorities settled, but Hudson River tunnel, wall still issues

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump will reap a huge budget increase for the military while Democrats cement wins on infrastruc­ture and other domestic programs that they failed to get under President Barack Obama if lawmakers can agree on a $1.3 trillion government-wide spending bill before a deadline later this week.

Battles over budget priorities in the huge bill were essentiall­y settled Tuesday, but a scaled-back plan for Trump’s border wall and a fight over a tunnel under the Hudson River still held up a final agreement.

Republican leaders were hopeful a deal could be announced as early as Tuesday evening, allowing for a House vote Thursday. If a bill doesn’t pass Congress by midnight Friday, the government will shut down for a third time this year.

The measure on the table would provide major funding increases for the Pentagon — $80 billion over current limits — bringing the military budget to $700 billion and giving GOP defense hawks a long-sought victory.

“We made a promise to the country that we would rebuild our military. Aging equipment, personnel shortages, training lapses, maintenanc­e lapses — all of this has cost us,” said House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis. “With this week’s critical funding bill we will begin to reverse that damage.”

Domestic accounts would get a generous 10 percent increase on average as well, awarding Democrats the sort of spending increases they sought but never secured during the Obama administra­tion.

Democrats touted billions to fight the nation’s opioid addiction epidemic. More than $2 billion would go to strengthen school safety through grants for training, security measures, and treatment for the mentally ill. Medical research at the National Institutes of Health, a longstandi­ng bipartisan priority, would receive a record $3 billion increase to $37 billion.

Agencies historical­ly unpopular with Republican­s, such as the IRS, appear likely to get increases too, in part to prepare for implementa­tion of Trump’s recently passed tax measure.

Lawmakers agreed on the broad outlines of the budget plan last month, after a standoff forced an overnight shutdown.

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