Houston Chronicle

House Republican­s miss budget deadline

Leaders’ dispute with tea party lawmakers over spending levels leaves measure adrift

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s departed Washington on Friday having missed a deadline to pass their long-stalled budget and without appearing to revive it despite the embarrassm­ent for the party and its new House Speaker Paul Ryan.

Continuing divisions between tea party lawmakers and House GOP leaders also shelved an effort to address an economic crisis in Puerto Rico. The White House is amping up the pressure on Republican­s over delays in providing money to combat the Zika virus.

The budget failure, while troubling for Ryan, R-Wis., isn’t stopping the once-dominant House and Senate Appropriat­ions committees from commencing work on spending bills. But trouble on the House floor awaits, where only a handful of the measures seem sure to advance.

The budget fight has its roots in last year’s bipartisan budget deal with President Barack Obama, which required Democratic votes to pass and added more than $100 billion over two years to agency coffers hit by automatic budget curbs known in Washington­speak as sequestrat­ion.

Many conservati­ves opposed the additional spending and are refusing to vote for a leadership-driven budget plan that endorses it. The GOP fiscal blueprint also recommends record spending cuts to meet its target of a balanced budget within 10 years, which means Democrats won’t vote for it even though it endorses higher agency budgets for the upcoming fiscal year.

“The Ryan budget that has been proposed is the most devastatin­g road-to-ruin budget in history,” said Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. “And even that wasn’t brutal enough for the radical forces that have taken control and dominate the House Republican caucus.”

Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., said on Friday he’s holding out hope for getting the budget to the floor, but didn’t seem very confident. Ryan on Thursday appeared ready to all but give up on this year’s budget drive.

“Part of the problem is we’re a victim of the success of the fact that we have appropriat­ion numbers already in law,” Ryan explained. “We already have an agreement in law and that has taken pressure off of the budget situation.”

The dirty secret is that failing to pass a budget has few real-world consequenc­es for lawmakers, and GOP leaders in both the House and Senate are instead moving ahead with the annual spending bills that determine agency operating budgets. That process is just getting underway, and it could fall prey to a similar set of House fights. Democrats are likely to oppose many of the bills if they’re laced with conservati­ve policies, while conservati­ves have problems with spending levels.

House GOP leaders continue to schedule mainly low-profile legislatio­n that minimizes the chances of party unrest. They did, however, send a bill to Obama that would give drug makers greater incentives to develop vaccines or medicines to protect people from Zika.

In the Senate, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., is promising to devote three months of Senate floor time to try to revive the broken appropriat­ions process that’s supposed to deliver 12 separate spending bills to the president but for years produced a take-it-or-leave-it bundle.

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press ?? House Speaker Paul Ryan has struggled to persuade tea party lawmakers in the House to vote for a budget that includes the extra spending that was part of last year’s bipartisan budget deal.
J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press House Speaker Paul Ryan has struggled to persuade tea party lawmakers in the House to vote for a budget that includes the extra spending that was part of last year’s bipartisan budget deal.

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