The Boston Globe

Congressio­nal leaders vow to avoid a shutdown

Remain short of a deal after Biden meeting

- By Erica L. Green and Catie Edmondson

WASHINGTON — Congressio­nal leaders emerged from a meeting with President Biden on Tuesday saying they were optimistic about averting a partial government shutdown at the end of the week, but remained short of a plan to do so before a Friday deadline.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican who is facing intense pressure from Biden, Democrats, and Senate Republican­s to agree to a spending deal over the fierce objections of right-wing lawmakers in his ranks, suggested he might be ready to do so in the coming days.

“We have been working in good faith around the clock every single day, for months and weeks, and over the last several days, quite literally around the clock, to get that job done,” said Johnson, who met with the president one on one after holding a group session with Biden and the other three top congressio­nal leaders.

“We’re very optimistic,” he added, saying that preventing a shutdown was “our first responsibi­lity.”

Senator Mitch McConnell, the Republican minority leader, gave a similarly upbeat assessment to reporters at the Capitol.

“We are making some real headway on the appropriat­ions process,” he said.

But it was not clear whether the progress would yield an agreement before midnight Friday, when government funding for several agencies is slated to lapse, with money for the remainder of federal agencies on track to run out March 8.

Johnson, under pressure from hard-right Republican­s, has refused to agree to spending legislatio­n that does not include some of his party’s hardline policy conditions, such as reversing a federal rule that aims to broaden access to abortion medication or a policy that could make it harder for some veterans deemed mentally ill to purchase guns.

Ultraconse­rvatives have brought the government to the brink of a shutdown or a partial shutdown three times in the past six months as they have sought more spending cuts and conservati­ve policy conditions written into how federal money is spent.

Biden emphasized during the talks Tuesday that a bipartisan funding bill should be “free of any extreme policies,” according to a meeting summary provided by White House officials.

The talks came after Senator Chuck Schumer, the Democratic majority leader, said Sunday that leaders had failed to reach a deal over the weekend because “House Republican­s need more time to sort themselves out.” Johnson accused Senate Democrats of “attempting at this late stage to spend on priorities that are further left than what their chamber agreed upon.” He has not said to which priorities he is referring.

Johnson also came under intense pressure during the meeting over legislatio­n to send aid to Ukraine, in a discussion that grew heated as Biden, the two Democratic leaders, and McConnell laid out an impassione­d case for continuing to arm Ukraine in its fight against Russian aggression. Johnson has so far refused to take up the $95 billion aid package the Senate passed earlier this month for Israel and Ukraine.

“The meeting on Ukraine was intense,” Schumer said. “Everyone in that room was telling Speaker Johnson how vital” sending aid was.

 ?? ?? Speaker Mike Johnson is facing intense pressure.
Speaker Mike Johnson is facing intense pressure.

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