San Francisco Chronicle

Congress eyes stopgap funding bill

- By Erica Werner Erica Werner is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — Congress is doing the bare minimum to keep the country running, readying a short-term spending bill to keep the lights on in government past Saturday, when President Trump will mark his 100th day in office.

The short-term legislatio­n will carry through next week, giving lawmakers more time to complete negotiatio­ns on a $1 trillion government­wide spending bill for the remainder of the 2017 budget year. The government is now operating under spending legislatio­n that expires Friday at midnight, so action is required before then.

In addition to the failure to come up with a spending deal that could pass ahead of Trump’s 100-day mark, the House GOP looked unlikely to give Trump a victory on health care before then. A revised health care bill has won the support of the hard-right House Freedom Caucus, holdouts on an earlier version that collapsed last month, but GOP leaders were struggling to round up votes from moderate leaning Republican­s.

Trump himself unleashed a tweet storm of criticism of Democrats involved in negotiatio­ns on the spending bill, accusing them of trying to close national parks and jeopardize the safety of U.S. troops.

“As families prepare for summer vacations in our National Parks — Democrats threaten to close them and shut down the government. Terrible!” Trump tweeted.

“Democrats jeopardizi­ng the safety of our troops to bail out their donors from insurance companies. It is time to put #AmericaFir­st,” he wrote.

Democrats dismissed such accusation­s.

“We are never going to shut government down. In fact, we don’t even have the power to do so,” said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco., referring to Republican­s. “They have the majority. They have the president. They have the Senate. They have the House. Any shutting down of government, the ball is in their court.”

Nonetheles­s, leaders in both parties projected certainty that a deal would ultimately be reached on the spending legislatio­n, which covers all government agencies and is leftover business from last year.

“Now we’re making progress — we’re not there yet,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

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