Miami Herald (Sunday)

Biden signs $1.2T funding bill after Senate dodges government shutdown

- UPI.com

The President Joe Biden on Saturday signed a $1.2 trillion government funding package to keep federal agencies operating, hours after the Senate passed the measure in an early morning session.

Biden’s signature ends Congress’s months-long struggle to secure a longterm spending plan without resorting to stopgaps.

“This agreement represents a compromise, which means neither side got everything it wanted. But it rejects extreme cuts from House Republican­s and expands access to child care, invests in cancer research, funds mental health and substance use care, advances American leadership abroad, and provides resources to secure the border that my Administra­tion successful­ly fought to include,” Biden said in a statement.

The Senate early Saturday passed the $1.2 trillion spending package, narrowly avoiding a scenario in which several federally funded agencies would have shut down after midnight.

The measure covers about 70 percent of discretion­ary government spending and completes the fiscal year 2024 appropriat­ions process nearly six months after its scheduled conclusion.

After fending off several amendments, Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., announced an agreement had been reached and the Senate voted 74-24 to approve the measure, hours after the House passed it earlier in the day by a 286-134 margin.

The 1,000-page legislatio­n contains six separate funding bills that needed to pass by the looming Fridaynigh­t deadline in order to avoid a government shutdown.

“We have just reached an agreement to complete the job of funding the government tonight,” Schumer wrote on X. “It wasn’t easy, but tonight our persistenc­e has been worth it. It is good for the American people that we have reached this bipartisan deal.”

The majority leader praised the effort for containing “significan­t investment­s for parents and kids and small businesses and health care workers and military families and so much more.

“Our efforts have paid off with a strong funding bill that now goes to President Biden’s desk,” he said.

If the bill had been amended in the Senate, it would would have needed to go back to the House for approval, but with the House adjourned for two weeks, such a measure would have guaranteed a government shutdown.

Earlier Friday, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Biden was hopeful the Senate would pass the funding measure without killer amendments.

“This is about – this is not about this President,” she said. “It’s not about the White House. It’s about the American people. We’ve always said that. This is about programs that American families need.”

The House began debate on the spending bill at 9 a.m. EDT Friday before voting at 11 a.m., with 101 Republican­s joining 184 Democrats to send the legislatio­n to the Senate.

Given the time crunch, the vote was held under suspension of rules, ditching a requiremen­t to first pass a rule that would face Republican opposition but placing a requiremen­t of two-thirds support for the measure to pass.

The legislatio­n passed despite strong criticism from some conservati­ves over its spending needs. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., filed a motion Friday to oust House Speaker Mike Johnson after his successful bipartisan efforts to advance the budget plan.

The most conservati­ve members of the House complained about Johnson’s relying on Democrats to get the funding legislatio­n passed. The majority of House Republican­s, 134, voted against the package while 101 voted for it.

Republican conservati­ves and House progressiv­es had pushed back over a one-year hold in funding for the United Nations Relief and Work Agency for Palestine Refugees over the alleged involvemen­t of some of its workers in the Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

“On any bipartisan agreement you have some Democrats and some Republican­s that drop off,” House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., said before the vote.

The package will keep the doors open to threefourt­hs of the government, including the department­s of Education, Homeland Security, Defense, Labor, Health and Human Services and State.

The package would give a boost to funding border protection­s that had long been supported by Republican­s.

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