Imperial Valley Press

House GOP pushes $81B disaster relief for hurricanes, wildfires

-

WASHINGTON (AP) — House Republican­s plan to unveil an $81 billion disaster aid package to help hurricane-ravaged communitie­s and states hit by wildfires, almost double the amount requested by President Donald Trump last month.

The emergency aid would provide $26 billion for community developmen­t block grants, which would help Florida, Texas and the Caribbean rebuild along with Western states recovering from wildfires. There’s funding for prevention of future flooding, highway repairs and help for small businesses. The package also would provide $3.8 billion for agricultur­e. Florida lawmakers have said citrus crops in their state have been suffering.

“It’s a big win for Florida’s agricultur­e,” said Rep. Tom Rooney, R-Fla.

Last month, Trump requested $44 billion, his third emergency request since hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria slammed the Gulf Coast and Caribbean. The request sparked howls from lawmakers from hurricane-hit states.

“While it was not everything, it was further than the administra­tion proposed,” Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Texas, said Monday.

The emergency relief could be paired with a stopgap spending bill to avert a government shutdown at midnight Friday or advance separately.

The Senate’s top Republican announced a lengthy wish list that he hopes to attach to a must-do spending bill this week, but there’s no agreement with the chamber’s Democrats and little time to waste.

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is eyeing the measure as a shortcut to power several other items into law, including hurricane relief, a renewal of a children’s health insurance program and funding to stabilize “Obamacare” insurance markets.

But top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer has other priorities, chiefly protection from deportatio­n of immigrants commonly referred to as “Dreamers” and securing spending increases for domestic agencies to match huge budget increases sought by defense hawks for the Pentagon.

The must-pass spending bill would be the main item of congressio­nal business remaining after Republican­s wrap up action on their hard-fought tax bill. Lawmakers are eager to head home for the holidays.

GOP leaders are aiming for Tuesday votes in both the House and Senate on the tax measure, which would be the biggest win by far for Trump on Capitol Hill.

As Republican­s controllin­g Congress hashed out their tax measure, however, a stack of unfinished legislatio­n has piled up. Negotiatio­ns have produced some progress, but many disagreeme­nts remain. Perhaps most significan­tly, Democrats are demanding that Trump fulfill pledges to address the immigratio­n issue, which involves protection­s for immigrants who were brought to the country illegally as children and who have often known no other home that the U.S.

Republican­s leaders don’t want to take on the politicall­y explosive issue of immigratio­n this year but promise it will be taken care of next year. And GOP leaders have so far rejected Democratic demands that domestic agencies and foreign aid accounts receive spending increases at parity with the $60 billion to $70 billion or more increase that Republican­s want to award the Department of Defense.

In the House, GOP leaders have announced a plan to pair a huge Pentagon funding bill with record spending increases with a stopgap spending measure called a continuing resolution that would keep the rest of the government running at current levels through Jan. 19. They have also added a GOP-drafted renewal of the popular Clinton-era Children’s Health Insurance Program.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States