The
Senate voted 85-7 to pass the $854 billion measure, which
combines funding for the Pentagon with money for domestic
programs including the Health and Human Services, Education and
Labor Departments.
Leaders of the Senate and the House have been trying to pass
appropriations bills before Sept. 30 and avoid the threat of
government shutdowns and the need for stopgap spending measures
that have been common for several years.
The Senate's Republican and Democratic leaders agreed to combine
the bills to increase their chances of passage in the chamber,
where Republicans have just a 51-49 majority.
Republicans generally favor increased military spending, and
Democrats have been pushing to fund domestic programs. The two
parties also agreed not to allow controversial amendments, also
in the hope of boosting chances of passage.
However, to become law, the spending plans must be approved by
the House of Representatives, which is out of Washington until
September and where President Donald Trump's fellow Republicans
have a much larger majority.
They must also be signed by Trump, who has expressed strong
reservations about some aspects of the package and said he would
welcome a government shutdown if necessary to win funding for
his proposed wall on the border with Mexico.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by James Dalgleish)
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