San Francisco Chronicle

Congress faces crucial issues

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

WASHINGTON — Lawmakers returned to Washington Tuesday facing fast-approachin­g deadlines, including pressing demands to replenish dwindling disaster aid reserves as Texas and Louisiana dig out from Harvey and an even more powerful hurricane, Irma, bears down on the U.S.

Must-do measures also include lifting the government’s debt limit and preventing a government shutdown at the end of the month. Republican leaders head to the White House later Tuesday to meet with President Trump on another top priority: rewriting the U.S. tax code in hopes of boosting the economy.

“We have to deal with Harvey, we have the debt ceiling,” Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Bakersfiel­d, the No. 2 House Republican, said Tuesday on the Fox Business Network. He also cited a short-term spending bill to keep the government running, as well as the budget, and taxes.

First up in the House on Wednesday is the initial $7.9 billion aid installmen­t to help with immediate Harvey recovery and rebuilding needs in Houston and beyond. Additional billions will be tucked into a catch-all spending bill later in the month that will keep the government running past Sept. 30, when the current budget year ends. The administra­tion wants the Harvey money to be linked with legislatio­n to increase the government’s $19.9 trillion debt limit and avert a first-ever default on U.S. payments.

Lawmakers and GOP aides say that after the House passes a “clean” Harvey aid package, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., will do just that by adding a debt limit increase to keep the government solvent — and solve the politicall­y toxic issue — past next year’s midterm elections. Later in September would come a stopgap spending measure to keep government agencies operating from the Sept. 30 end of the fiscal year into December.

Linking the debt issue to Harvey aid — pushed by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, among others — is rankling GOP conservati­ves and others.

“Somebody who’s just been pulled off their roof doesn’t want to hear about our internecin­e squabbles and debates over procedure when they’ve lost their homes and are trying to figure out where they’re going to sleep the next night,” said Rep. Charlie Dent, R-Pa.

Swift action on Harvey will give Congress and Trump the chance to look competent and remind voters that government can be a positive force. GOP lawmakers head into the final quarter of the year desperate to notch accomplish­ments and make headway on a sweeping tax overhaul, and the majority party is eager for the chance to turn around its dreary track record ahead of next year’s midterm elections.

Adding to the pile of work, a few important programs are expiring at the end of September and need to be renewed. They include children’s health insurance payments and a national federal flood insurance program that has bipartisan support but continuall­y pays out more than it takes in through premiums.

And Democratic leaders are seeking reassuranc­es about considerat­ion of legislatio­n on immigratio­n and additional spending for domestic accounts facing a freeze at existing levels.

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press ?? Congress returns to face work on immigratio­n, the debt limit, funding the government, and help for victims of Texas storms.
J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press Congress returns to face work on immigratio­n, the debt limit, funding the government, and help for victims of Texas storms.

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