The Palm Beach Post

Congress working to reach deal ahead of shutdown date

- David Morgan REUTERS

WASHINGTON – A fractured U.S. Congress struggled behind the scenes on Wednesday to produce a massive spending bill to fund defense, homeland security and other programs that lawmakers must pass before the weekend to avert a partial government shutdown.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and other House Republican leaders said they hope to vote on Friday, leaving the Senate just hours to meet a midnight deadline by passing legislatio­n that is expected to cover about threefourt­hs of the $1.66 trillion in discretion­ary government spending for the fiscal year that began on Oct. 1.

“Right now, if Republican­s and Democrats continue to work together in good faith to fund the government, I’m hopeful we can avert a shutdown,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., said at a news conference.

But the compressed schedule raised the possibilit­y of at least a brief partial shutdown after Friday.

“My assumption, and what I’ve told our members, is we’re likely to be here this weekend,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., told reporters. “That will be determined, however, by how long it stays in the House.”

Johnson said he hoped legislatio­n would be unveiled as soon as Wednesday but warned that a vote on passage would be delayed to give lawmakers time to review the measure.

House and Senate Republican­s are also discussing a possible short-term continuing resolution – their fifth since September – to keep federal agencies funded at current levels until after a two-week congressio­nal break that is expected to begin on Friday.

“We should have the bill text – hopefully – by this afternoon,” Johnson said on Wednesday, as the window for action narrowed. “I don’t think we’ll need a CR – I don’t.”

Two weeks ago, Congress narrowly avoided a shutdown that would have affected agricultur­al, transporta­tion and environmen­tal programs, without resorting to a continuing resolution.

On Tuesday morning, Johnson and Schumer unveiled an agreement on funding. President Joe Biden pledged to sign it into law.

More than 24 hours later, congressio­nal leaders were still unable to release the legislatio­n as aides worked behind closed doors to finalize the text of the package, prompting hardline Republican­s to complain they may not have enough time to review the legislatio­n.

“We’re told to pass the bill unread, not understood and debated, or, alternativ­ely, face the chaos and inevitable public vitriol associated with a government shutdown,” said Sen. Mike Lee, RUtah, who backs a continuing resolution to April 12 to give lawmakers time to review the text.

Besides the department­s of Homeland Security and Defense, the bill would fund agencies including the State Department and the Internal Revenue Service as it girds for its April 15 taxpayer filing deadline.

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