Dayton Daily News

Shutdown clock ticking; GOP struggles for spending deal

Health, disaster measures dropped from short-term bill.

- By Andrew Taylor

— With WASHINGTON a shutdown clock ticking toward a Friday midnight deadline, congressio­nal Republican­s scrambled on Wednesday to finalize a mustpass spending bill. A major obstacle evaporated after key GOP senators dropped a demand to add health insurance subsidies for the poor.

The No. 2 House Republican, California Rep. Kevin McCarthy, said party leaders have scrapped plans to combine a short-term spending bill with $81 billion worth of disaster aid and a $658 billion Pentagon funding measure. Instead, Republican­s are likely to schedule a separate vote on the disaster package, he said.

The strategy for averting a government shutdown appeared to be coming into focus, though it looks like many items on Capitol Hill’s list of unfinished business could be pushed into next year. It also appears the upcoming short-term measure will fund the government through mid-January, giving lawmakers time to work out their leftover business.

“I think if this all comes together we can vote and leave,” McCarthy said in anticipati­on of a House vote on Thursday.

Hopes for a bipartisan budget deal to sharply increase spending for both the Pentagon and domestic agencies appeared dead for the year and Democrats were rebuffed in their demands for protection­s for young immigrants brought to the U.S. illegally as children.

Sens. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., and Susan Collins, R-Maine, announced Wednesday that they would not seek to add the insurance subsidies, which are designed to stabilize the Affordable Care Act’s markets. The tax bill repeals requiremen­t that individual­s purchase insurance.

Trying to combine the health measure with the spending bill was a demand of Collins when President Donald Trump and Senate GOP leaders secured her vote for the party’s tax cut measure. But House conservati­ves strongly opposed the move.

House Republican­s weren’t part of that deal, and with the tax vote over, it became plain that Senate leaders were not able to deliver for her.

A short-term fix for an expiring program that pays for veterans to seek care outside the Department of Veterans Affairs system appeared likely. In addition, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said efforts were underway for a “patch” to make sure the states facing shortfalls from the Children’s Health Insurance Program, which pays for health care for 9 million children from low-income families, won’t have to purge children from the program.

The fate of the $81 billion House disaster aid measure, now likely to see a separate vote, appears unclear. Conservati­ves are upset with the price tag of the plan, which also contains billions of dollars for California wildfire recovery. Democrats are pressing for more help for Puerto Rico.

Democrats such as Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer of New York are arguing for a two- or threeweek temporary spending bill that would send a number of unresolved issues — including disaster aid — into the new year. Schumer appears to believe that shifting as many issues as possible into next year will increase his leverage on immigratio­n and the budget.

Also in the mix is an expiring overseas wiretappin­g program aimed at tracking terrorists. It has bipartisan backing but is opposed by both stout conservati­ves and some liberals. McCarthy said the program night just be extended for a few weeks.

‘I think if all this comes together we can vote and leave.’

Kevin McCarthy House Majority Leader

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / AP ?? House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., shown in the Capitol’s Statuary Hall on Tuesday, said GOP leaders will likely consider an $81 billion disaster-aid package in a vote separate from the one expected to happen today. Democrats are calling for a temporary spending bill to shift disaster spending into 2018.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / AP House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., shown in the Capitol’s Statuary Hall on Tuesday, said GOP leaders will likely consider an $81 billion disaster-aid package in a vote separate from the one expected to happen today. Democrats are calling for a temporary spending bill to shift disaster spending into 2018.

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