New York Daily News

Hill push to OK $1.2T funding deal by Friday

- BY TIM BALK

Lawmakers in Washington are set to rush Friday to authorize a $1.2 trillion spending deal that would avert any partial government shutdown, as a midnight deadline looms.

The deal — hammered out by Democratic leadership in the Senate, GOP leadership in the House and President Biden — must make it through the House and then the Senate on Friday to meet the deadline.

Lawmakers were likely to meet the deadline, House aides said Thursday. But there were some concerns that far-right Republican­s in the chamber might torpedo the bill at the last minute, potentiall­y prompting a limited government shutdown.

The six-bill spending package would keep the government humming into September. Both parties said they had emerged from negotiatio­ns with victories.

Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, has hailed the package as an important step to invest in the military and strengthen the Homeland Security Department’s efforts to seal the border.

“House Republican­s have achieved significan­t conservati­ve policy wins, rejected extreme Democrat proposals, and imposed substantia­l cuts to wasteful agencies,” Johnson said in a statement.

The GOP also managed to secure a freeze on U.S. funding for the embattled U.N. relief agency in Gaza, UNRWA. The agency has been the target of criticism after Israel said at least 12 UNRWA staffers participat­ed in Hamas’ Oct. 7 terror attacks in southern Israel. (UNRWA said it fired the staffers.)

Sen. Bernie Sanders, the independen­t Vermont progressiv­e, has branded members of the GOP a “starvation caucus,” referencin­g the looming famine in Gaza.

“Tens of thousands of people are starving,” Sanders said on the Senate floor Wednesday. “UNRWA is trying to feed them.”

Still, the Democratic Party celebrated what it described as success in staving off GOP cuts to areas including education that would have inflicted pain on American families.

Even if lawmakers miss their deadline, they would still have the weekend to authorize the deal before Monday, when some government workers would face the possibilit­y of furloughs if there is a shutdown.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a Brooklyn Democrat, said on the Senate floor Thursday that the deal represente­d “good news that comes in the nick of time.”

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