Congress readies votes Friday on bill to
avert government shutdown
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[April 28, 2017]
By Richard Cowan and Amanda Becker
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Congress is
set to debate legislation that would extend until May 5 the deadline for
a deal on federal spending through September and head off a feared
government shutdown at midnight on Friday.
The House Rules Committee, in a late-night meeting, voted 8-2 to send
the legislation to the full House of Representatives for debate and
votes on passage on Friday, just hours before expiry of a deadline for
funding many federal agencies.
If the measure passes the House, as expected, the Senate would be
prepared to promptly take up the bill, in the hope of also passing it
and sending it to President Donald Trump to be signed into law.
The measure would give Republican and Democratic lawmakers an additional
week to work out differences on about $1 trillion in funding for the
government through Sept. 30, the end of the current fiscal year.
Without the extension or a longer-term funding bill, federal agencies
will run out of money by midnight Friday, likely triggering abrupt
layoffs of hundreds of thousands of federal government workers until
funding resumes.
The last government shutdown, in 2013, lasted for 17 days, and many
lawmakers were nervous about the prospect of another.
"I'm confident we will be able to pass a short-term extension" of
funding for programs for the fiscal year that began nearly seven months
ago, House Speaker Paul Ryan told reporters early on Thursday.
House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi warned that the purpose of the
stopgap measure was to tie up loose ends of a deal to provide around $1
trillion in money for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30 and not for
"kicking the can down the road to have this same back-and-forth" over
funding disputes.
House Appropriations Committee Chairman Rodney Frelinghuysen expressed
optimism in a statement that a final funding package will be completed
soon.
In the midst of the delicate negotiations, Trump took to social network
Twitter to blast Democrats.
"As families prepare for summer vacations in our National Parks -
Democrats threaten to close them and shut down the government.
Terrible!" Trump tweeted in a series of tweets.
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President Donald Trump's overview of the budget priorities for
Fiscal Year 2018 are displayed at the U.S. Government Publishing
Office (GPO) on its release by the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) in Washington, U.S. on March 16, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua
Roberts/File Photo
Negotiators were racing against the clock to resolve remaining
disputes in the massive spending bill amid talks that have already
handed Democrats at least two major victories, despite Republican
control of Congress.
Trump, a Republican, gave in to Democratic demands that the spending
bill not include money to start building the wall he wants to erect
on the U.S.-Mexico border. His administration also agreed to
continue funding for a major component of Obamacare, formally known
as the Affordable Care Act, despite vows to end the program.
It remained unclear whether Republicans would prevail in their
effort to sharply hike defense spending without similar increases
for other domestic programs. Trump has proposed a $30-billion
spending boost for the Pentagon for the rest of this fiscal year.
Such funding disputes could resurface later in spending bills for
the next fiscal year.
Disagreements remaining to be ironed out include funding to make a
healthcare program for coal miners permanent and to plug a gap in
Puerto Rico's Medicaid program, the government health insurance
program for the poor.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan and Amanda Becker; Editing by Lisa Von
Ahn and Jonathan Oatis)
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