The Columbus Dispatch

Conservati­ves oppose plan to avert shutdown

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON — Hard-right conservati­ves are rebelling against a plan by House GOP leaders for a two-week reprieve from a possible government shutdown next week.

Speaker Paul Ryan and other GOP leaders want to set a new government shutdown deadline just before Christmas to give time for talks with Democrats on the budget, hurricane relief and other unfinished business. Right now, Washington faces a Dec. 8 deadline.

But conservati­ves said Friday that they fear the new Dec. 22 deadline means they’ll get legislatio­n they don’t like jammed through.

Democrats won’t commit to helping the GOP pass the two-week funding bill. They want assurances that immigrants brought illegally to the U.S. as children will be given protection from deportatio­n — and many insist that it pass this year.

If Democrats don’t provide the votes to prevent a shutdown, Republican­s would have to pass a temporary spending bill, known as a “continuing resolution,” on their own.

Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., insists “it’ll be fine” and that they want to get all the work done.

But conservati­ves fear a torrent of spending bills and legislatio­n to shore up Obamacare insurance markets, and also worry that immigratio­n issues would be addressed in the yearend crunch.

“I am a hard no on any (continuing resolution) ending the week of Christmas,” said Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas. “That tells me that they have an absolutely horrible bill that they want to try to jam through.”

With the additional two weeks, congressio­nal leaders in both parties hope that talks over spending could produce the framework for a longer-term “omnibus” appropriat­ions bill. That legislatio­n would award the Pentagon and domestic agencies with spending increases that could total more than $100 billion in 2018 alone. There’s other unfinished business too, including reauthoriz­ation for a popular children’s health program and aid for states and U.S. territorie­s slammed by hurricanes.

A temporary government funding bill spending runs out Dec. 8. Some conservati­ves are suggesting that Congress work Christmas week rather than face pre-Christmas deadline pressure.

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