Austin American-Statesman

Bill to avert government shutdown stalls

- By Andrew Taylor

A must-do bill WASHINGTON — to prevent the government from shutting down this weekend and to fund the fight against the Zika virus is stalled in the Senate, held up by bipartisan opposition as the clock ticks toward a Friday deadline.

Democrats, demanding money so Flint, Mich., can address its lead-contaminat­ed water crisis, overwhelmi­ngly opposed the measure in a Senate test vote Tuesday. So did a dozen of the Senate’s most conservati­ve members.

The 55-45 vote against the stopgap funding bill sidelined it for now at least. The GOP defections

left Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell short of a simple majority and with far fewer than the 60 votes needed to clear a filibuster hurdle. McConnell is looking for a way out that doesn’t include capitulati­ng on Flint, which GOP leaders fear would start a revolt among House tea party conservati­ves, who say Michigan has enough money to pay for its own problems.

Instead, senior congressio­nal leaders are scrambling for a compromise solution that would satisfy Democrats, promising to address the Flint issue after the election in talks on a separate water resources bill. But Democrats refuse to take them at their word.

“‘Trust me, we will consider Flint later’ — that’s like nothing to me,” said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi.

But House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy said talks were continuing.

“There might be an element (on Flint) we could do,” McCarthy told reporters.

Democrats say it’s unfair that the water crisis in Flint has gone on for more than a year with no assistance, while Louisiana and other states are getting $500 million for floods that occurred just last month. Democrats have played a strong hand in the negotiatio­ns and know they have leverage because Republican­s controllin­g the House and Senate are eager to avoid a politicall­y harmful shutdown at midnight Friday.

“Democrats have been clear that Congress should not leave Flint and other lead-tainted communitie­s out of any (stopgap spending) negotiatio­n that includes emergency disaster funding,” said Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and other top Democrats in a Tuesday morning letter to McConnell.

McConnell characteri­zed the Democratic position as “no Flint, no flood” and indicated he is considerin­g dropping the flood aid. Both sides hope to avert that.

The stopgap spending bill would keep the government running through Dec. 9 and provide $1.1 billion in long-delayed funding to fight the spread of the Zika virus and develop a vaccine and improved tests to detect it. Zika can cause grave birth defects.

McConnell has made numerous concession­s in weeks of negotiatio­ns on the measure, agreeing, for instance, to drop contentiou­s provisions tied to Zika funding that led Democrats to filibuster prior Zika measures this summer and earlier this month. A provision to make Planned Parenthood ineligible for new anti-Zika funding for Puerto Rico was dropped, as was a provision to ease pesticide regulation­s under the Clean Water Act. A $400 million package of spending cuts added to the measure is no longer controvers­ial.

The measure also includes a popular full-year spending bill that provides a 4 percent budget increase for the Department of Veterans Affairs.

“Can it really be that Democratic leaders have embraced dysfunctio­n so thoroughly that they’d tank a noncontrov­ersial, 10-week funding bill over — well, what exactly?” McConnell asked as he opened the Senate on Tuesday. “It’s almost as if a few Democratic leaders decided long ago that bringing our country to the brink would make for good election-year politics.”

House Speaker Paul Ryan said Tuesday that the water developmen­t bill “is the better place to address this.” But the White House poked at Ryan for so far excluding it from the water projects bill.

“The speaker of the House says he opposes adding funding for Flint to the continuing resolution and believes that it should be handled in the water resources bill. But it’s not included in the water resources bill that’s advancing through the House. And then he has the nerve to suggest that it’s Democrats who are the ones causing problems,” said White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH / AP ?? “Congress should not leave Flint and other lead-tainted communitie­s out of any (stopgap spending) negotiatio­n,” said Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (above) in a letter to Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.
SUSAN WALSH / AP “Congress should not leave Flint and other lead-tainted communitie­s out of any (stopgap spending) negotiatio­n,” said Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (above) in a letter to Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

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