USA TODAY International Edition

More on spending bill

- Christal Hayes Contributi­ng: Doug Stanglin

The $ 1.37 trillion measure also addresses border wall funding and age limits for tobacco products.

WASHINGTON – The House passed a $ 1.37 trillion spending package that includes money for President Donald Trump's border wall, funding for gun violence research and increasing the age for purchasing tobacco products from 18 to 21.

The approval Tuesday could avert a government shutdown that would begin Friday, when the government is set to run out of funding. The package will go to the Senate for approval before being sent to Trump for his signature.

The votes on the spending package, which was broken up into two bills, marked the first of three monumental votes scheduled in the House this week. The others include a historic vote on two articles of impeachmen­t against Trump and a new North American trade deal.

Trump has yet to weigh in on the spending deal, reached after months of discussion­s between House and Senate leaders. Trump and Congress are wary of another government stoppage after last year's 35- day shutdown over disagreeme­nts on the president's desire to build a wall along the southern border.

The spending deal leaves funding for the wall, one of the president's campaign promises, unchanged from $ 1.375 billion, but like last year, the administra­tion will keep the ability to reallocate funds from other government accounts, a trade- off since Democrats wanted to rein in the administra­tion's power to adjust spending after it was denied by Congress.

Though the amount was a far cry from the $ 8.6 billion the president requested, some House Democrats remained opposed to the settled agreement. Shortly before the vote, the Hispanic Caucus said it opposed the inclusion of money for the wall and detention beds for immigrants.

The caucus, which includes about 40 lawmakers, said the pros of the bill did not “outweigh the serious issues that remain.”

“We have a responsibi­lity to our constituen­ts and Latinos across this country to defend our communitie­s from the president's chaotic, wasteful and racist policies,” the caucus said in a statement, explaining that without reining in the administra­tion's ability to move around money, “this spending bill is effectively a blank check that will allow the administra­tion to continue redirectin­g billions from real national security priorities to instead inflict cruelty and militarize our border.”

The deal offered something for both Democrats and Republican­s.

Liberals secured a 3.1% raise for federal workers, upgrades to election systems and $ 25 million in gun violence research after decades of the gun lobby working against it.

Republican­s were able to tout $ 22 billion more in funding for the Pentagon and the preservati­on of restrictio­ns related to abortion.

Some of the largest measures in the deal are fairly bipartisan, including a permanent repeal of the “Cadillac Tax,” a 40% tax on higher employer insurance plans that was passed as part of the Affordable Care Act.

The deal would raise the age to purchase tobacco products from 18 to 21, a move that gained support after the increased use of vaping and e- cigarettes.

About 28% of high schoolers and 11% of middle schoolers surveyed this year had vaped within the past month, and as of Oct. 31, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 34 deaths related to vaping.

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