Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Plan seen favorably to avoid shutdown

- ANDREW TAYLOR Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Zeke Miller of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the Trump administra­tion have informally agreed to keep a stopgap government­wide funding bill — needed to avert a shutdown at the end of this month — free of controvers­y or conflict.

The accord is aimed at keeping any possibilit­y of a government shutdown off the table despite ongoing battles over covid-19 relief legislatio­n, while sidesteppi­ng the potential for other shutdown drama in the run-up to the November election.

That’s according to Democratic and GOP aides on Capitol Hill who have been briefed on a Tuesday conversati­on between Pelosi, D-Calif., and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin. They required anonymity to characteri­ze an exchange they were informed of but not directly party to.

“House Democrats are for a clean continuing resolution,” said Pelosi spokesman Drew Hammill, referring to the stopgap bill. The definition of “clean” tends to vary among those steeped in Capitol Hill jargon, but it would not necessaril­y rule out noncontrov­ersial add-ons like routine extensions of programs, such as federal flood insurance or authority to spend money for highway programs. Some lawmakers are likely to seek substantiv­e legislatio­n and even covid-related items if consensus could somehow evolve.

“We do believe that we’ll be able to get funding to avoid a shutdown,” White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said Thursday.

The duration of the temporary funding measure or what noncontrov­ersial items might ride along haven’t been settled, aides say, and the Pelosi spokesman declined to further characteri­ze the agreement.

The government faces a Sept. 30 deadline to avoid a shutdown. There is sentiment among some Democrats for the stopgap legislatio­n to extend into next year, but December appears to be the administra­tion’s preference and a more likely result.

The developmen­t comes as lawmakers are absent from Washington but are preparing to return for a brief preelectio­n session that’s likely to involve battling over pandemic relief legislatio­n.

The Mnuchin-Pelosi agreement on preventing a shutdown appears aimed at ensuring that the consequenc­es of gridlock on the pandemic relief front do not include a politicall­y freighted partial shutdown.

The duration of the stopgap measure affects which modest changes — often referred to as “anomalies” — are added to address immediate needs like expiring authorizat­ions at the Department of Health and Human Services or immediate needs at the Pentagon and the Department of Agricultur­e. A longer continuing resolution requires more extensive negotiatio­n.

Monica Crowley, a spokeswoma­n for Mnuchin, said Treasury would decline to comment.

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