Bangkok Post

US lawmakers release huge spending bill

Legislatio­n seeks to avoid govt shutdown

- ERIK WASSON

WASHINGTON: US lawmakers have agreed to a $1.7 trillion funding bill and plan to ram the legislatio­n through the House and Senate this week to avert a Dec 24 government shutdown.

The bill, which would provide funding for government agencies through the Sept 30 end of fiscal 2023, includes $858 billion for national defense, a $76 billion increase. Domestic agencies would see a $773 billion level.

It also would provide more than $45 billion to aid Ukraine in its defense against the Russian invasion. This tranche of aid may be the last for Ukraine for a while given significan­t House Republican scepticism about the war effort. The bill also includes $41 billion in disaster relief for communitie­s affected by recent hurricanes and wildfires.

“The pain of inflation on American families is real, and it is being felt right now across the federal government,” Senate Appropriat­ions Chairman Patrick Leahy in a statement upon releasing the bill. “From funding for nutrition programs and housing assistance, to home energy costs and college affordabil­ity, our bipartisan, bicameral, omnibus appropriat­ions bill directly invests in providing relief from the burden of inflation on the American people.”

The 4,155 page bill was filed after 1am yesterday.

The release of the bill was delayed for hours as Democrats squabbled over language related to the location of a new headquarte­rs for the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion until a compromise was reached to satisfy lawmakers from Maryland and Virginia. The compromise, brokered by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer requires consultati­ons with lawmakers from both states, according to an aide.

In the overall bill, the majority Democrats agreed to a roughly 10% increase to defense funding while limiting nondefence funding to a 5.5% increase to gain enough Republican support to pass the bill under the Senate’s filibuster rules. Funding for veterans programmes would receive a 22% increase, Mr Leahy said.

The Senate will vote first and intends to pass the measure before tomorrow, leaving the House no time to demand changes before the Christmas holiday. Meeting the deadline will require coopearati­on of all senators.

The sequence of votes is to help House Speaker Nancy Pelosi handle the tiny two-vote majority she now holds and insure her members back the bill. Some progressiv­es are expected to oppose the large increases for defense and policing.

House Republican­s were left out of the negotiatio­ns on the measure and have argued that any bill should wait until at least January when they will take over the House. They are expected to mostly stick together in voting against the bill, heightenin­g the need for Democrats to be unified.

Senate Republican leaders have concluded that the narrow and fractious GOP House majority would be unable to complete the fiscal 2023 spending bill anytime soon, and instead chose to compromise with Democrats. Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell portrayed it as a victory.

“President Biden wanted to cut defense spending and grow liberal domestic spending in real dollars,” McConnell said on the Senate floor. “But Congress is rejecting the Biden Administra­tion’s vision and doing the exact opposite.”

For the GOP, that means foregoing a chance to claw back money for more Internal Revenue Service agents that was part of the Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act, though Republican­s were able to block any further increases to the IRS budget.

The bill also bolsters funds for family planning but Democrats abandoned an attempt to green-light tax-payer funded abortions by stripping out the so-called Hyde Amendment containing the prohibitio­n.

The legislatio­n would change the way electoral votes are counted for presidenti­al elections, clarifying that the vice president does not have the ability to toss out electoral college votes. The inclusion of the Electoral Count Act is aimed at preventing a repeat of the Jan 6 insurrecti­on, which was inspired by unfounded claims the 2020 election was stolen and that then-Vice President Mike Pence had the ability to declare Donald Trump the winner.

Of interest to China-watchers: the bill includes a weapons funding boost for Taiwan and a ban on downloadin­g social media app TikTok to government phones. A proposal to ban Chinese telecommun­ications firm Huawei from the US banking system was not included, however.

The bill also contains changes to tax-shielded retirement accounts, would reauthoris­e Food and Drug Administra­tion fees and finance Medicaid in Puerto Rico and other territorie­s.

Lawmakers were unable to attach a bevy of other congressio­nal priorities to the must-pass legislatio­n despite weeks of negotiatio­ns. Among the items on the cutting-room floor are a deal on corporate tax breaks, including the expensing of research and developmen­t spending. Democrats had demanded a revival of the 2021 child tax credit in exchange which Republican­s deemed too costly.

An administra­tion request for billions in coronaviru­s funding was ignored as was a last-minute attempt to attach changes for farm-worker visas and to impose new FDA oversight over commercial laboratory testing.

West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin attempted to add changes to energy project permitting but he was rebuffed.

Lawmakers are also forgoing the opportunit­y to attach an increase to the nation’s $31 trillion debt ceiling to the bill, setting up a fight next year with House Republican­s. They plan to use the need to stave off a payments default in the second half of 2023 to seek cuts to domestic spending.

 ?? NYT ?? The US Capitol in Washington, DC.
NYT The US Capitol in Washington, DC.

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