Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ House GOP leaders unveiled a plan to avert a government shutdown.

Temporary spending measure expires Friday

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON — House GOP leaders unveiled a plan Saturday to avert a government shutdown next weekend and keep the government open through Dec. 22.

The measure would buy time for bipartisan talks on a bigger budget agreement that would give the Pentagon and government agencies relief from a pending budget freeze.

A temporary spending bill enacted in September expires at midnight Friday.

The move comes despite opposition from some GOP conservati­ves who think they’re being set up for a pre-Christmas deal they won’t like.

House Democrats say they won’t vote for the legislatio­n without protection­s for immigrants brought to the country illegally as children. GOP leaders oppose the idea.

Talks on a budget agreement are likely to restart next week after a setback Tuesday when top Democrats pulled out of a meeting with President Donald Trump after he attacked them on Twitter.

The measure also contains a shortterm fix to prevent several states from running out of money to operate a popular program that provides health care to children from low-income families. The Children’s Health Insurance Program’s authorizat­ion ran out Oct. 1.

House Appropriat­ions Committee Chairman Rodney Frelinghuy­sen, R-N.J., said the new stopgap funding measure “will allow for additional time for a deal to be reached on top-line spending levels for this fiscal year. Once this agreement is made, my committee will rapidly go to work with the Senate to complete the final legislatio­n.”

“I am eager to know what Republican leadership believes they can accomplish in the next two weeks that they haven’t been able to accomplish in the last two months,” countered top House Appropriat­ion Democrat Nita Lowey of New York.

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