USA TODAY US Edition

Deadlines loom for returning lawmakers

Congress grapples with aid, avoiding shutdown

- Ken Tran

WASHINGTON – Lawmakers are back in Washington after the holiday break and heading into a chaotic month. Though they have a short to-do list, it includes daunting tasks for what has been a historical­ly unproducti­ve Congress.

Congress has less than two weeks to avert a partial government shutdown after kicking the can down the road twice. While lawmakers avoided the traditiona­l Christmas deadline crunch, they now are up against the clock.

Lawmakers reached a spending agreement Sunday, but the country isn’t out of the woods yet. The full House and Senate still have to pass the agreement and send it to President Joe Biden’s desk before a government shutdown sets in.

Along with funding the government, lawmakers continue to negotiate an allencompa­ssing foreign aid package that provides assistance to key U.S. allies such as Ukraine and Israel.

Despite the apparent urgency that befell Capitol Hill to swiftly pass foreign aid last fall, that decisivene­ss has largely fallen to the wayside as negotiator­s seek to tie border policy changes – a notorious policy area on which Congress has failed to agree – to foreign aid.

Against the backdrop of those two, time-sensitive issues, House Republican­s are continuing their impeachmen­t inquiry into Biden. They accuse, without direct evidence, the president of financiall­y benefiting from his family’s foreign business dealings.

Here’s what to know about Congress’ agenda as lawmakers return to session.

Averting a government shutdown

The most immediate task for lawmakers is averting a government shutdown. Congress passed two stopgap measures in the fall. The last continuing resolution funded the government with a two-phased approach, setting a Jan. 19 funding deadline for some government functions and a Feb. 2 deadline for the rest.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., put forth the two-step continuing resolution in part to avoid setting a Christmas funding deadline. That crunch has become the norm over the past years on Capitol Hill and often has pressured lawmakers to pass a last-minute deal before heading home for the holidays.

But Johnson’s approach has now left lawmakers with less than two weeks to fund the government or face a partial shutdown.

Lawmakers announced a $1.66 trillion spending agreement this week to keep the government’s doors open in 2024, including $886.3 billion in defense spending and $772.7 billion in domestic, nondefense spending. It’s in line with a deal Biden and former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., made last year during debt ceiling negotiatio­ns.

The first tranche of government funding that expires on Jan. 19 pays for agricultur­e; military constructi­on and veterans affairs; transporta­tion, housing and urban developmen­t; and energy and water. The remaining spending expires on Feb. 2.

House Republican­s are hoping to make the migrant crisis at the southern border a focal point in the new year. While border policy negotiatio­ns were at first tied to a foreign aid package, talks of including border policy changes in a government funding package could hamper shutdown negotiatio­ns.

Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, a member of the House Freedom Caucus, in a letter urged his colleagues to “make funding for federal government operations contingent on the President signing H.R.2, or its functional equivalent, into law and stopping the flow across our border.” He referenced House Republican­s’ partisan border bill that includes new restrictio­ns on asylum law.

Passing aid for Ukraine and Israel

While the most conservati­ve lawmakers in the House are pushing for border changes in a government funding package, negotiator­s in the Senate are trying to reach a deal with to provide funding for key U.S. allies such as Ukraine and Israel.

But Senate Republican­s have pushed to tie border security changes to foreign aid, which has stalled U.S. assistance to Ukraine and new funding for Israel.

Much of the discussion­s have remained private. Negotiatio­ns have been moving slowly largely because Democrats have balked at the changes Republican­s have proposed to border policy, calling them too severe and restrictiv­e. Republican­s argue Democratic proposals would do little to address the crisis.

To make things more difficult, it’s unclear whether the House would take up any deal from the Senate. Johnson has heavily pushed for House Republican­s’ border bill and called it last week the “necessary ingredient” to addressing the border.

GOP investigat­ors continue Joe Biden impeachmen­t inquiry

While Congress faces two urgent deadlines, GOP investigat­ors are continuing their impeachmen­t inquiry into the president.

House Republican­s have long alleged Biden personally benefited from his family’s overseas business dealings. But while the inquiry has shown his family made millions from their foreign interests, the inquiry has yet to deliver evidence directly implicatin­g the president.

The House Oversight Committee, one of the committees leading the inquiry, announced last week that it would hold the president’s son Hunter Biden in contempt of Congress after he defied a subpoena to testify to investigat­ors behind closed doors. The House Judiciary Committee, another committee leading the investigat­ion, will consider a similar resolution.

Hunter Biden demanded to testify in a public hearing because he said he wanted to avoid Republican­s selectivel­y leaking parts of his transcript. Republican­s refused Hunter Biden’s request, saying that Democrats would disrupt a public hearing and that he does not dictate the terms of the subpoena.

Hunter Biden “blatantly defied two lawful subpoenas, choosing to read a prepared statement outside of the Capitol instead of appearing for testimony as required,” House Oversight Chair James Comer, R-Ky., and House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, said. “We will not provide him with special treatment because of his last name.”

The White House has dismissed the inquiry, noting that investigat­ors have failed to produce evidence tying Biden to his family’s business affairs.

Hunter Biden also has denied allegation­s his father was involved, calling the investigat­ion “shameless” at the Capitol on the day he had been set to testify.

“There is no evidence to support the allegation­s that my father was involved in my business because it did not happen,” Hunter Biden said.

 ?? ERIC GAY/AP ?? House Speaker Mike Johnson stands with Republican members of Congress, on Wednesday in Eagle Pass, Texas, on a visit to the U.S./Mexico border.
ERIC GAY/AP House Speaker Mike Johnson stands with Republican members of Congress, on Wednesday in Eagle Pass, Texas, on a visit to the U.S./Mexico border.

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