The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

House passes $1.4T spending package

President gets funding for his border wall while Democrats get increases for domestic programs.

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON — The Democratic-controlled House voted Tuesday to pass a $1.4 trillion government-wide spending package, handing President Donald Trump a victory on his U.S.-Mexico border fence while giving Democrats spending increases across a swath of domestic programs.

What happened

The hard-fought legislatio­n also funds a record Pentagon budget and is serving as a must-pass legislativ­e locomotive to tow an unusually large haul of unrelated provisions into law, including an expensive repeal of Obama-era taxes on highcost health plans, help for retired coal miners, and an increase from 18to 21 in nationwide legal age to buy tobacco products.

The two-bill package, some 2,371 pages long after additional tax provisions were folded in on Tuesday morning, was unveiled Monday afternoon and adopted less than 24 hours later as lawmakers prepared to wrap up reams of unfinished work against a backdrop of today’s vote on impeaching President Donald Trump.

The House first passed a measure funding domestic programs on a 297-120 vote. But one-third of the Democrats defected on a 280-138 vote on the second bill, which funds the military and the Department of Homeland Security, mostly because it funds Trump’s border wall project.

Why it matters

The spending legislatio­n would forestall a government shutdown this weekend and give Trump steady funding for his U.S.-Mexico border fence, a move that frustrated Hispanic Democrats and party liberals. The year-end package is anchored by a $1.4 trillion spending measure that caps a difficult, months-long battle over spending priorities.

The mammoth measure made public Monday takes a split-the-difference­s approach that’s a product of divided power in Washington, offering lawmakers of all stripes plenty to vote for — and against. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., was a driving force, along with administra­tion pragmatist­s such as Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who negotiated the summertime budget deal that it implements.

What’s next

The White House said Tuesday that Trump will sign the measure.

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