They did not say how much money they had agreed on, providing no
details in statements from three key appropriations negotiators,
Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy, Republican Senator Richard
Shelby and Democratic Representative Rosa DeLauro.
"If all goes well, we should be able to finish an omnibus
appropriations package by Dec. 23," Shelby said in a statement.
The news came hours after the House began moving a stopgap
spending bill to avoid a partial shutdown that would otherwise
begin on Friday, providing time to pass the sweeping full-year
bill, which was expected to include more than $1.5 trillion in
funding and will run through the end of the fiscal year on Sept.
30, 2023.
A first, procedural vote on the stopgap legislation was set for
Wednesday.
The full-year "omnibus" bill is also expected to contain new
emergency funds to aid Ukraine in its battle against Russian
forces.
Ukraine could get billions more, after Biden asked Congress last
month for $37 billion.
It also is expected to fold in an unrelated bill reforming the
way Congress certifies U.S. presidential elections.
The latter is aimed at avoiding a repeat of the deadly turmoil
of Jan. 6, 2021, when supporters of then-President Donald Trump
tried to stop the certification of Biden as the winner of the
2020 presidential election.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell had said his Republicans
want work on the omnibus bill wrapped up by Dec. 22. "We intend
to be on the road going home on the 23rd," he told reporters
ahead of the agreement.
Any negotiations on the funding bill would get more complicated
next year, when Republicans take majority control of the House.
Conservative Republicans have been clamoring for deep domestic
spending cuts Democrats want to avoid.
(Reporting by Katharine Jackson, Gram Slattery, Moira Warburton
and Richard Cowan; Editing by Andy Sullivan, Mark Porter,
Jonathan Oatis, Deepa Babington and Lincoln Feast)
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