Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Senate OKs $209 billion in spending

Lawmakers remain at stalemate over funding sought by president

- ANDREW TAYLOR

Current stopgap spending authority expires Nov. 21, and another measure will be needed to prevent a shutdown reprising last year’s 35-day partial shuttering of the government.

WASHINGTON — The Senate passed a long-overdue, $209 billion bundle of bipartisan spending bills Thursday, but a bitter fight over funding demanded by President Donald Trump for border fencing imperils broader Capitol Hill efforts to advance $1.4 trillion worth of annual Cabinet agency budgets.

The 84-9 vote sends the measure into House-Senate negotiatio­ns but doesn’t much change the big picture. There has been little progress, if any, on the tricky trade-offs needed to balance Democratic demands for social programs with Trump’s border wall demands.

To amplify the point, Democrats shortly thereafter filibuster­ed a much larger measure anchored by the $695 billion Pentagon funding bill, protesting Trump’s plans to again transfer billions of dollars from the Pentagon to the border wall project.

“This delay is because they insist on including in this bill authority for President Trump to raid American tax dollars from our military — money that is intended for specific military priorities — to pay for his wall, which he promised that Mexico would pay for,” said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt. “And that is unacceptab­le.”

Passage of the annual appropriat­ions bills is one of the few areas in which divided government in Washington has been able to deliver results in the Trump era, despite last winter’s 35-day partial government shutdown. Trump has only reluctantl­y signed the measures, however, and the White House has been unyielding so far on its wall demands during this spending round.

A sense of optimism in the aftermath of a July budget and debt deal has faded. The budget pact blended a must-do increase in the government’s borrowing cap with relief from the return of stinging automatic budget cuts known as sequestrat­ion that were left over from a long-failed 2011 budget deal.

At issue are the agency appropriat­ions bills that Congress passes each year to keep the government running. The hard-won budget and debt deal this summer produced a top-line framework for the 12 yearly spending bills, but filling in the details is proving difficult.

While it appears likely that lawmakers will prevent a government shutdown with a government-wide stopgap spending bill, the impasse over agency appropriat­ions bills shows no signs of breaking.

Democrats say White House demands for $5 billion for Trump’s long-sought U.S.-Mexico border wall have led the GOP-controlled Senate to shortchang­e Democratic domestic priorities.

They say negotiatio­ns can’t begin in earnest until spending increases permitted under the July budget deal are allocated among the 12 appropriat­ions subcommitt­ees more to their liking. Trump is demanding a huge border funding increase that comes mostly at the expense of a major health and education spending bill.

Senate Appropriat­ions Committee Chairman Richard Shelby, R-Ala., said Democrats “seem more focused on scoring political points than ensuring our military has the certainty and funding it needs to counter our adversarie­s.”

“I am not optimistic,” said House Appropriat­ions Committee Chairwoman Nita Lowey, D-N.Y. “I don’t see the Senate taking action that would enable us to have an active negotiatio­n with them. They haven’t set the groundwork. And until they figure out the [subcommitt­ee allocation­s] — although we are having very nice conversati­ons — I don’t see progress.”

Current stopgap spending authority expires Nov. 21, and another measure will be needed to prevent a shutdown reprising last year’s 35-day partial shuttering of the government.

Staff discussion­s on a new stopgap continuing resolution haven’t yielded agreement yet. Democrats, including Lowey, have floated the idea of a stopgap continuing resolution into February.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., is pressing for a continuing resolution of shorter duration in hopes of wrapping up the unfinished budget work by Christmas. McConnell and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., spoke by telephone on Monday, congressio­nal aides said, in hopes of breaking the logjam.

But no progress was made at a follow-up staff session on Tuesday that included White House representa­tives. The White House is playing a strong hand on the border wall since it has begun employing its transfer authoritie­s to shift billions of dollars of Pentagon funding toward wall constructi­on — far more than it has obtained through the regular funding process.

The White House is demanding $5 billion in appropriat­ions for the wall this budget year — up from $1.4 billion now. It is also demanding to keep its powers to transfer Pentagon dollars as well — and to get Congress to refill Pentagon military base constructi­on projects tapped last month to pay for up to $3.6 billion worth of border fencing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States