Texarkana Gazette

Congress is wrapping up the session without much drama, leaving budget fight for spring

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON—Congress is setting up the next budget showdown for early in Donald Trump’s new administra­tion, agreeing on a stopgap measure to fund the government only through April 28.

The House on Thursday overwhelmi­ngly approved the temporary spending bill, ending its work for the session as lawmakers dashed off for the holidays.

Final passage by the Senate was expected by Friday’s deadline. It hit a hurdle after Democrats sided with Rust Belt lawmakers seeking to preserve health and pension benefits that are in jeopardy for retired miners.

Even so, two weeks before the Christmas holiday, lawmakers could be wrapping up the 114th Congress as one that will be notable not for big accomplish­ments but for concluding without too big of mess.

There was even a nod to bipartisan­ship, as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., joined a tribute to Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, who is retiring after three decades in Congress.

Hillary Clinton, the Democratic presidenti­al nominee, returned to Washington for the tribute, noting this was not the speech she had hoped to give, having lost the White House to Trump. She said Reid’s legacy will be the Affordable Care Act and other legislatio­n that became law under his watch.

“Harry has fought for the simple but powerful idea that, yes, we are all created equal,” she said.

Republican leaders had hoped to fund the government through the end of the fiscal year next September, to clear the new year for the incoming Trump administra­tion.

But the president-elect’s team indicated they preferred a stopgap funding measure, siding with congressio­nal conservati­ves who argued that an earlier deadline would allow Trump to put his own stamp on government spending.

The April deadline all but ensures a budget brawl early in the Trump administra­tion, when the new White House and the GOP Congress could be focused on other priorities.

Democrats called on Trump— who campaigned on promises to coal state voters—to intervene to help the miners.

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