The Guardian (USA)

US House Republican­s pitch short-term spending deal as shutdown looms

- Reuters

With a possible partial US government shutdown looming in two weeks, Kevin McCarthy on Sunday said he would bring a defense spending bill to a vote “win or lose” this week, despite resistance from hardline fellow Republican­s.

The House speaker is struggling to bring fiscal 2024 spending legislatio­n to the floor, with Republican­s fractured by conservati­ve demands for spending to be cut to a 2022 level of $1.47tn – $120bn below the spending on which McCarthy agreed with Joe Biden in May.

Late on Sunday, members of the hardline House Freedom Caucus and the more moderate Main Street Caucus announced a deal on a short-term stopgap bill to keep the government open until 31 October, but with a spending cut of more than 8% on agencies apart from the defense and veterans affairs department­s.

The measure, which is unlikely to become law, also includes conservati­ve restrictio­ns on immigratio­n and the US border with Mexico.

Republican­s have said that such a deal could allow the House to move forward on the defense spending bill this week.

But it was unclear whether the measure had sufficient Republican support to pass the chamber. The spending cuts were also likely to draw opposition from Democrats in the House and Senate, who reject the immigratio­n provisions.

Republican­s hold a narrow 221-212 majority in the chamber as they bicker over spending and pursue a new impeachmen­t drive against Joe Biden while the United States faces a possible fourth partial government shutdown in a decade.

McCarthy has begun to face calls for floor action seeking his ouster from hardline conservati­ves and others who have accused him of failing to keep promises he made to become speaker in January after a revolt from some of the most conservati­ve Republican­s in the House.

The Republican-controlled House and Democratic-led Senate have until 1 October to avoid a partial shutdown by enacting appropriat­ions bills that Biden, a Democrat, can sign into law, or by passing a short-term stopgap spending measure to give lawmakers more time for debate.

McCarthy signaled a tougher stand with hardliners, telling the Fox News Sunday Morning Futures program that he would bring the stalled defense bill to the floor this week. The House last week postponed a vote on beginning debate on the defense appropriat­ions bill due to opposition from the hardliners.

“We’ll bring it to the floor, win or lose, and show the American public who’s for the department of defense, who’s for our military,” McCarthy said.

McCarthy also said he wants to make sure there is no shutdown on 1 October, saying: “A shutdown would only give strength to the Democrats.”

McCarthy has held closed-door discussion­s over the weekend aimed at overcoming a roadblock by the conservati­ve hardliners to spending legislatio­n.

They want assurances that legislatio­n will include their deep spending cuts, as well as conservati­ve policy priorities including provisions related to tighter border security that are unlikely to secure Democratic votes.

“We made some good progress,” McCarthy said.

Elise Stefanik, the number four House Republican, told the Fox

News Sunday program that she was optimistic about moving forward on appropriat­ions after closed-door discussion­s.

But Republican representa­tive Nancy Mace told ABC’s This Week that she expects a shutdown and did not rule out support for a vote to oust McCarthy’s ouster. Mace complained that the speaker has not made good on promises to her involving action on women’s issues and gun violence.

“Everything’s on the table at this point for me,” Mace said.

Mace played down the consequenc­es of a shutdown, saying much of the government would remain in operation and that the hiatus would give government workers time off with back pay at a later date.

Democratic former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said a shutdown would risk harming the most vulnerable members of society who depend on government assistance.

“We’re talking about diminishin­g even something as simple and fundamenta­l as feeding the children,” Pelosi told MSNBC. “We have to try to avoid it.“

 ?? Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters ?? Kevin McCarthy on Capitol Hill in Washington DC on 14 September 2023. Photograph:
Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters Kevin McCarthy on Capitol Hill in Washington DC on 14 September 2023. Photograph:

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