Congress
averts government shutdown, Obama signs funding measure
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[October 01, 2015]
By David Lawder and Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Ending weeks of
infighting, the U.S. Congress on Wednesday voted to avert a government
shutdown just hours before a midnight deadline, passing a stop-gap
measure to extend funding for federal agencies until Dec. 11.
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The House of Representatives relied heavily on Democrats to secure
passage in a 277-151 vote. A large majority of Republicans voted
against the measure, which did not meet conservatives' demands to
cut off money to women's healthcare provider Planned Parenthood amid
an abortion controversy.
The House also passed a companion bill aimed at restoring the
Planned Parenthood defunding provision, but the Senate is not
expected to act on it, effectively killing it.
President Barack Obama signed the spending extension into law later
on Wednesday, the White House said in a statement.
Obama welcomed the news with a tinge of sarcasm in remarks to a
group of progressive state legislators in Washington.
"The good news is that it looks like the Republicans will just
barely avoid shutting down the government for the second time in two
years. That's a somewhat low bar but we should celebrate where we
can," Obama said.
"The bad news is that it looks like Republicans will just barely
avoid shutting down the government again for the second time in two
years," he added.
Earlier in the day, by a vote of 78-20, the Senate approved the
legislation that was needed to keep the government running at
current levels with the start of the new fiscal year on Thursday.
The controversy over Planned Parenthood funding threatened a repeat
of a 17-day shutdown in October 2013 that was prompted by Republican
demands to deny federal funding for Obama's healthcare law, the
Affordable Care Act.
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House conservatives, cheered on by some Senate colleagues, had
insisted that Planned Parenthood be punished for allegedly
improperly selling fetal tissue harvested from abortions. The
organization has denied the allegations.
The debate shifted dramatically last week when House Speaker John
Boehner announced his resignation and said he would put the Senate's
"clean" funding bill to a vote.
The funding extension aims to give congressional negotiators and
Obama about 10 weeks to work out a longer-term budget deal and ease
automatic spending constraints on military and domestic spending.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has said he would like to
reach a deal with Democrats that sets funding levels for two fiscal
years, through Sept. 30, 2017.
(Reporting by David Lawder and Richard Cowan; Editing by Nick
Zieminski, Bernard Orr and Lisa Shumaker)
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