House passes stopgap spending bill to
avert shutdown
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[February 07, 2018]
By Richard Cowan and Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of
Representatives on Tuesday approved another stopgap bill to keep the
federal government from shutting down, hours after President Donald
Trump said he would "love" to see a shutdown if immigration legislation
were not included.
In a further sign of the Republican-controlled Congress' inability to
get its most basic work done, the House in a 245-182 vote passed and
sent to the Senate a temporary spending bill to extend most agency
funding until March 23.
It was the fifth such stopgap of the federal fiscal year, which began
Oct. 1. Stopgaps are needed when Congress fails to approve a full budget
on time by that date. Congress has managed to pass its spending bills on
time in only four of the past 40 years, according to congressional
researchers.
The Senate was expected to take up the House bill on Wednesday and
likely change it, requiring it to go back to the House for further
action, with a Thursday deadline looming to get a finished bill to Trump
for his signature.
As a result of the time crunch, Democrats canceled a retreat to
Maryland's Eastern Shore that they had planned for Wednesday to Friday
and said they would talk strategy in the U.S. Capitol instead.

The House bill does not contain changes to U.S. immigration law, which
were a key point of contention in a partisan standoff that led to a
three-day partial shutdown last month.
Senate Democrats were expected to balk at the House's bill's inclusion
of an increase in Pentagon funding through Sept. 30, the end of the
current fiscal year, but exclusion of any increase in non-defense
spending.
Republicans and Democrats said they were making progress, however, on a
budget deal that would set new, higher spending limits for defense and
non-defense programs.
Last month's shutdown came after lawmakers failed to reach agreement on
contentious budget and immigration issues.
"I'd love to see a shutdown if we don't get this stuff taken care of,"
Trump said at the White House.
The White House later clarified that it did not expect the budget deal
to include specifics on immigration.
MCCONNELL OPTIMISTIC
A broad budget deal could end the brinkmanship over spending that roils
Washington so regularly that financial markets barely flinch anymore at
the threat of a government shutdown.
"I'm optimistic that very soon we'll be able to reach an agreement,"
Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters on
Capitol Hill.
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said an agreement being forged
would increase funding for domestic programs like drug treatment and
broadband infrastructure that Democrats want, as well as a military
spending increase sought by Republicans.
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Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) speaks during a news
conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., February 6, 2018.
REUTERS/Joshua Roberts

"We're making real progress," he told reporters.
January's shutdown came after Democrats insisted any spending bill
include protections for young immigrants known as "Dreamers" brought to
the country illegally as children. Democrats are not taking that
approach this time around. "Nobody wants another one (shutdown) but
him," Schumer said of Trump.
Trump's fellow Republicans, who control both chambers of Congress, are
eager to keep spending and immigration separate.
"We don't need a government shutdown on this," Republican Representative
Barbara Comstock told Trump at the White House.
Congress faces another deadline on a separate front. The United States
could have trouble paying its bills within weeks if lawmakers do not
raise the federal debt ceiling, another fiscal issue fraught with
political peril.
The third-ranking House Republican, Representative Steve Scalise, said
negotiations over the debt ceiling were being coupled with the Senate
budget talks.
IMMIGRATION ISSUE
Lawmakers have been struggling to reach a deal on an immigration bill,
despite broad public support for helping the Dreamers, hundreds of
thousands of young Latinos who were allowed to study and work without
fear of deportation under a program set up by former Democratic
President Barack Obama.
Trump last year ordered those protections removed by March 5, although a
federal court has blocked his administration from ending the program.
Lawmakers are trying to agree on legislation that would protect Dreamers
and boost border security. Schumer said the Senate could take up the
issue next week.

Trump has said any immigration deal must include changes to programs for
legal immigration that would assess applicants on their skills, rather
than their countries of origin or ties to U.S. residents. Democrats
oppose that idea.
(Additional reporting by Makini Brice, David Morgan and Amanda Becker;
Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Peter Cooney)
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