Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Stopgap US funding bills hung up in both chambers

- Tribune News Service Cq-roll Call

WASHINGTON — Efforts to pass a stopgap funding measure before Saturday night’s deadline were sputtering in both chambers Friday, with lawmakers openly predicting a partial government shutdown was inevitable. The only question appeared to be how long the funding lapse would last.

Border security talks in the Senate stalled Friday ahead of a key procedural vote Saturday, casting doubt on whether there would be the required 60 votes to end debate on a seven-week stopgap bill.

Meanwhile, House Republican­s huddled to discuss remaining options after their last shot at a 31day continuing resolution chock full of spending cuts and restrictiv­e border policies fell flat on the floor earlier Friday.

None of the options — taking up a Senate bill that hasn’t even passed yet, or a “clean” CR extending current funding levels for a week or two, appeared to be gaining much steam, at least yet.

Rep. Tim Burchett, R-tenn., one of the 21 GOP “no” votes earlier in the day on the conservati­ve CR option, said Speaker Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., floated a 14-day option that won’t get his vote.

“We have one duty: Let’s pass a budget. All 50 states do a budget. We go down this road every time. They say ‘Trust us, trust us, trust us. We’ll do better next time.’ We’re not doing any better the next time,” Burchett said. He allowed that any shutdown was likely to be “a short one,” however, and didn’t seem to rule out a bipartisan bill to reopen the government going to the floor at some point.

Aggressive appropriat­ions schedule

Meanwhile, House Republican leaders at the closed-door conference meeting laid out an aggressive schedule for October considerat­ion of seven of the chamber’s remaining eight appropriat­ions bills.

On its face, passing more full-year fiscal

2024 appropriat­ions bills through the House won’t help avert a partial government shutdown, considerin­g the Senate hasn’t passed any of its bills and the two chambers are far from any kind of framework deal.

But the idea is to show GOP lawmakers opposed to any stopgap funding measure that leaders are serious about the “regular order” process of passing individual bills, even if a little late.

To start with, Mccarthy told members that the House would consider the Energy-water and Legislativ­e Branch appropriat­ions bills next week. That’s a slight shift from previous indication­s that the Interioren­vironment bill along with Energy-water would be on next week’s docket. But the Legislativ­e Branch bill might be an easier lift than Interior-environmen­t, which is facing another

$3.9 billion in cuts to appease GOP holdouts — and might give members an opportunit­y to voice their opposition to a boost in member pay while the shutdown is in effect.

The following week, leadership plans to bring the Transporta­tion-hud and Interior measures to the floor. Financial Services would follow the week of Oct. 16.

The Commerce-justicesci­ence bill would be considered the week of

Oct. 23, with Labor-hhseducati­on the week of Oct. 30, per Mccarthy’s plan.

Those are the two fiscal 2024 bills that haven’t yet gone before the full Appropriat­ions Committee, and could prove the most difficult to pass. Labor-hhs-education Appropriat­ions Chairman Robert B. Aderholt is charged with cutting an additional $23 billion from his bill, on top of steep cuts that were already there, for a combined 30 percent reduction below this year.

Aderholt, R-ala., said some programs would have to be “eviscerate­d” with cuts that deep.

Missing from the schedule is the Agricultur­e appropriat­ions bill, which the House defeated in a 191-237 vote Thursday night. The “no” votes included 27 Republican­s who opposed an abortion provision in the bill or felt that the cuts were too steep.

Agricultur­e Appropriat­ions Chairman Andy Harris, R-MD., said earlier Friday that he did not know what the path forward for his bill would be. “I don’t know, you’ve got to ask the 27 Republican­s who voted against it, not me,” he said. “I voted for it.”

The House on Thursday did pass the Defense, Homeland Security and State-foreign Operations bills, and the Military Constructi­on-va measure in late July.

And Rep. Tom Cole, R-okla., chairman of the Transporta­tionhud Appropriat­ions Subcommitt­ee, called the schedule for October that GOP leaders laid out “aspiration­al.”

Staying close

The House will remain in session on Saturday and members are staying close, in case there’s something to actually vote on. But it was clear that, despite leadership’s push on fullyear spending bills, there was no consensus on how to keep agencies operating in the short-term.

“The problem is the holdouts don’t offer any other options,” Rep. Daniel Crenshaw, R-texas, said. “The holdouts say, ‘Well, let’s have a shutdown and we’ll work through the appropriat­ions process.’ As if all of a sudden the messy democracy that makes the appropriat­ions process difficult in the first place is somehow going to resolve itself.”

At the same time, it wasn’t clear their Senate counterpar­ts would have any better luck when that chamber votes on cloture at 1 p.m. Eastern time Saturday. After spending the previous couple days trying to hammer out a deal to add up to $6 billion in border security measures and potentiall­y some other policy restrictio­ns, those talks appeared to crater on Friday.

The problem for many Republican­s was that nothing on the table was tough enough, while for many Democrats, it was too much.

Sen. J.D. Vance, R-ohio, who already opposes $6 billion for Ukraine in the Senate bill, said the border and immigratio­n amendment under discussion was unlikely to have much meaningful impact.

“My very strong suspicion here is that the immigratio­n amendment, the net effect it has is very little improvemen­t on border security,”

Vance said. “And it puts Republican­s in a very tough negotiatin­g position. I don’t think — I don’t know why we’re negotiatin­g against ourselves here, instead of actually strengthen­ing House Republican­s’ position.”

Wisconsin Republican Ron Johnson on Friday afternoon sought unanimous consent to take up a stopgap measure that would extend current funding for two weeks, through Oct. 14.

“It’s something we all ought to agree on,” Johnson said on the floor. “We prevent a shutdown. We prevent pain to real people.”

But Senate Appropriat­ions Chair Patty Murray, D-wash., objected to his request, saying a two-week extension wouldn’t provide enough time to complete fiscal 2024 appropriat­ions.

She said Johnson’s bill also wouldn’t extend expiring authorizat­ions for the Federal Aviation Administra­tion, community health centers and other programs. “We need a CR that gives us the actual time to get through our bipartisan spending bills,” she said.

With no obvious way out of a shutdown at this point, some members are looking to mid-october as the next big inflection point: that’s when the first paychecks for federal workers go out after the funding lapse.

“I’m very concerned about, you know, midoctober. We’re gonna shut this thing down tomorrow night for how long? I don’t know,” said Rep. Steve Womack, R-ark. “There’s a lot of people in there that I think would agree to maybe a 14-day CR, we got to get past the next payroll. And if we don’t ... the pressure building in this place is going to be pretty intense.”

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