Shelby Daily Globe

Democrats unveil temporary funding bill to avert shutdown

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrats controllin­g the House unveiled a government-wide temporary funding bill on Monday that would keep federal agencies fully up and running into December. The measure would prevent a partial shutdown of the government after the current budget year expires at the end of the month.

The stopgap funding bill comes as negotiatio­ns on a huge COVID-19 relief bill have collapsed and as the Capitol has been thrust into an unpreceden­ted political drama with Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death, which has launched an intense election-season Senate confirmati­on fight.

The temporary funding measure provoked Republican­s and President Donald Trump, who were denied a provision that would give the administra­tion continued authority to dole out Agricultur­e Department farm bailout funds. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had initially informally indicated she would add to the measure language that would permit Trump to continue to release aid to farmers that would otherwise be delayed, but she pulled back after protests from other Democrats, who complain that the Trump administra­tion has favored southern states such as Georgia — a key swing state and home of Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue — and larger producers in distributi­ng bailout funds.

The legislatio­n, called a continuing resolution, or CR, in Washington-speak, would keep every federal agency running at current funding levels through Dec. 11, which will keep the government afloat past the election and possibly reshuffle Washington’s balance of power.

The measure also extends many programs whose funding or authorizat­ions lapse on Sept. 30, including the federal flood insurance program, highway and transit programs, and a long set of extensions of various health programs such as a provision to prevent Medicaid cuts to hospitals that serve many poor people.

It also finances the possible transition to a new administra­tion if Joe Biden wins the White House and would stave off an unwelcome Covid-caused increase in Medicare Part B premiums for outpatient doctor visits.

“We do prefer additional farm aid in the CR,” said Trump economic adviser Larry Kudlow. “Most of all we want a clean CR to keep the government open.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., took to Twitter to say the temporary funding bill “shamefully leaves out key relief and support that American farmers need.”

Congressio­nal aides close to the talks had depicted the farm provision as a bargaining chip to seek comparable wins for Democrats, but Pelosi requests for provisions related to the Census and funding for states to help them carry out elections this fall were denied by GOP negotiator­s.

Trump announced $13 billion in coronaviru­s relief for U.S. farmers and ranchers Thursday night during a rally in the swing state of Wisconsin, angering some Democrats.

The release of the legislatio­n paves the way for a House vote this week and Pelosi appears to be calculatin­g that Republican­s controllin­g the Senate would have little choice but to accept it. Legislatio­n requires Democratic votes to pass the Senate, but Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., retains the right to structure Senate votes that could make Democrats, especially those from farm country, uncomforta­ble.

At issue is the 30% of the federal government’s day-to-day budget that goes to Cabinet agency operations funded by Congress each year. The annual appropriat­ions process broke down in the Senate this year and it’s unclear but probably unlikely that the $1.3 trillion in agency spending bills will be enacted this year, even in a post-election lame duck session, especially if Joe Biden is elected to replace Trump.

In the past, both Democrats and Republican­s have sought to use government funding deadlines and must-past temporary funding bills as leverage to try to win concession­s elsewhere on Washington’s agenda. Such efforts invariably fail.

Republican­s in 2013 used it in a failed attempt to prevent implementa­tion of the so-called Obamacare health law and Democrats returned the favor in 2018 in a futile effort to force debate on permitting immigrants brought into the country illegally as children to remain in the U.S. But Pelosi says she won’t attempt any such confrontat­ion.

“None of us has any interest in shutting down government. That has such a harmful and painful impact on so many people in our country, so I would hope that we can just proceed,” Pelosi said Sunday on ABC News. “We’re not going to be shutting down government.”

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