The Palm Beach Post

House delays budget vote as disputes linger

Postponeme­nt shows clout conservati­ves wield in House GOP.

- By Alan Fram and Andrew Taylor

Top Republi- cans delayed a planned House vote on a short-term budget bill Tuesday to give themselves time to quell party divisions and avert a partial government shutdown by the weekend.

With conservati­ves insisting on commitment­s to curb spending, a House vote on the temporary measure planned for Wednesday will instead occur Thursday, said a GOP leadership aide. In a further signal of problems, the House Rules Committee announced it had postponed a planned meeting from Tuesday until Wednesday to work out debating rules for the budget measure.

The staffer spoke on condi- tion of anonymity because the staffer was not authorized to speak publicly about internal party discussion­s.

The delay underscore­d the clout that conservati­ves wield within the House GOP as the party aims to push legislatio­n through the House and Sen- ate this week to keep federal agencies functionin­g. A partial shutdown would occur at midnight Friday night unless the Republican-led Congress approves more money, and a closure due to GOP fissures would be a jarring political blow to a party straining all year to show it can govern effectivel­y.

The short-term legislatio­n is designed to give bargainers more time to address remain ing disputes over spending levels and other issues that have been folded into the year-end mix, including immigratio­n and health care. Congressio nal leaders from both parties plan budget talks with Pres- ident Donald Trump at the White House on Thursday.

Without support from their own conservati­ves, House GOP leaders would need backing from Democrats to push a temporary measure through the chamber. Democratic votes will definitely be crucial in the Senate, where Republi- cans by themselves lack the 60 votes needed to approve the legislatio­n.

Democrats hope to use their leverage in the year-end budget battle to win concession­s on spending, immigratio­n and other issues. They have yet to say what they will do.

In further indication of the problems GOP leaders face, 34 House Republican­s sent a letter to House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., urging him to hold a vote by year’s end on

extending protection­s for hundreds of thousands of immigrants who arrived in the U.S. illegally as children. Trump ended those protec- tions this fall, and Democrats are demanding that they be renewed in the year-end rush of business.

Earlier Tuesday, Ryan declined to describe the status of internal GOP budget talks after House Republican­s met privately to discuss their next steps.

“We’re having a conversa- tion with our members about what we think the best way forward is,” he told reporters. “You’ll see when we bring the bill to the floor.”

Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., head of the hard-right House Freedom Caucus, said his group was having “a good, healthy discussion” with lead ers about ways to “fund the government without putting our military at a disadvan- tage.”

On Monday, the Freedom Caucus pressured GOP leaders for the short-term bill to run through Dec. 30, not Dec. 22 as has been planned. Conservati­ves say setting the deadline before Christmas, when lawmakers want to go home, gives Democrats more leverage to get higher spending into the legislatio­n.

Several Republican­s said after Tuesday’s meeting that the bill would likely run through Dec. 22 but said there were no final decisions. One Freedom Caucus member, Rep. Dave Brat, R-Va., said conservati­ves wanted leaders’ assurances that they wouldn’t agree to unacceptab­ly higher spending.

“It’s always the load-upthe-Christmas-tree play, go get Democrat votes, bust the budget caps,” Brat said of past spending showdowns when Democratic votes were needed.

Across the Capitol, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said that, besides temporaril­y financing the government, the short-term measure would make cash available to several states that are running out of money for the Children’s Health Insurance Program. That widely popular program helps provide medical care to more than 8 million children.

McConnell, R-Ky., said he was hoping that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Democrats “will continue to work with us in good faith to pass this short-term funding bill and maintain the critical functions of the federal government.”

On Monday, McConnell expressed more confidence, saying, “We will pass it before the end of the week.”

With the budget chafing

under spending caps imposed by a 2011 bipartisan budget deal, Democrats want defense and domestic programs to get equal funding increases.

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