Daily Tribune (Philippines)

U.S. Congress averts Thanksgivi­ng shutdown

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The United States Congress passed a stop-gap funding bill Wednesday to keep federal agencies running for another two months and avert a painful holiday season government shutdown — although the deal leaves out aid to war-torn Ukraine and Israel requested by President Joe Biden.

Three days before the Friday night deadline, the Senate voted to keep the lights on through mid-January with a resolution that had advanced from the House of Representa­tives during a week of high-stakes brinkmansh­ip on Capitol Hill.

The last-ditch “continuing resolution” was pitched by new House Speaker Mike Johnson as more than a million public workers looked set to be sent home unpaid ahead of next Thursday’s Thanksgivi­ng holiday, upending government functions from national parks and air traffic control to federal policymaki­ng.

Democrats had pressed for the inclusion of aid for Israel, Ukraine and Taiwan — but each now looks set to be dealt with separately, with a $61 billion request from the White House for Kyiv looking particular­ly precarious amid conservati­ve opposition.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said the bill was “far from perfect” but achieved Democrats’ aims of keeping the lights on without “cruel cuts or poison pills.”

The shutdown crisis was triggered by hardline conservati­ves in the Republican­led House defying their own party leadership to scupper the bills that normally set the annual federal budget as they pressed for deep spending cuts.

House Republican­s needed help from Democrats to overcome a rebellion on the right to advance the bill, which essentiall­y puts off budgeting until January of 2024 — a presidenti­al election year.

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