New US House Republican speaker faces early test on government funding
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[November 01, 2023]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican Mike Johnson, the untried speaker of
the U.S. House of Representatives, faces an early test of how well he
can unify his splintered majority as he tries to avoid a partial
government shutdown a little more than two weeks away.
The fourth-term lawmaker from Louisiana will try to pass three 2024
spending bills, which could help placate hardline conservatives, before
turning to a stopgap measure to keep federal agencies funded past Nov.
17.
But tensions between party hardliners and centrists, which led to the
historic ouster of Johnson's predecessor early this month, are
threatening to undermine the bills which would fund the legislative
branch; transportation, housing and urban development; and the
Department of the Interior and the environment through Sept. 30.
"They're at risk," said Representative Don Bacon, a centrist Republican
from Nebraska who warned that hardline demands for deep spending cuts
could further split the conference.
Johnson has already heeded hardliners' demands by calling for a Thursday
vote on a $14.3 billion bill to aid Israel in its war with Hamas. He has
severed that aid from funding for Ukraine, despite objections by
Democrats and some Republican moderates, and heeded hardline calls to
pay for the aid by cutting money Democrats previously allocated to the
Internal Revenue Service.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, the top Democrat in Congress, said
he was "deeply troubled" by the move.
"The new speaker knows perfectly well that if you want to help Israel,
you can't propose legislation that is full of poison pills," Schumer
said on the Senate floor.
'LITMUS TEST'
The measures will pose an early test of Johnson and his narrow 221-212
majority's ability to agree amongst themselves and to work with
Democrats, who hold the Senate majority and the Oval Office.
"This will be a litmus test," said Representative Ryan Zinke, a
Republican who sits on the House committee that sets spending
priorities. "There's going to be some groaning and moaning, but I think
they'll pass."
The U.S.'s budget deficit soared to $1.7 trillion in the fiscal year
ended Sept. 30, the highest outside the COVID era. Rising interest
rates, the high costs of the Social Security and Medicare programs and
the lingering effects of a 2017 tax cut have pushed the nation's debt
over $33 trillion.
Hardliners are pressing for spending cuts and policy wins, such as
tighter border security, as part of any temporary funding measure known
as a continuing resolution, or "CR," to avoid a partial government
shutdown.
Former Speaker Kevin McCarthy was ousted by a small band of hardliners
after agreeing to pass a CR with Democratic support. The intraparty
brawl that followed has left many Republicans wary of picking another
shutdown fight.
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Newly elected Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-LA) takes his
oath of office after he was elected to be the new Speaker at the
U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., October 25, 2023. REUTERS/Elizabth
Frantz/File Photo
"We just wasted three weeks with whatever this last goat rodeo was,"
said Representative Kelly Armstrong of South Dakota. "It's very
difficult for members in tough districts to go home and explain any
reason for a shutdown right now."
That raises the likelihood of Johnson ultimately opting for a
"clean" CR without conditions or spending cuts.
Johnson has floated the idea of a CR that would run into January or
April and cut spending 1% across the board - including defense.
In their full-year bills by reassigning previous allocations for
Democratic programs to their own priorities, House Republicans have
proposed spending a net $34.8 billion on Interior and the
environment, a 10% overall cut with a 39% reduction for the
Environmental Protection Agency, according to a Republican fact
sheet.
With a similar use of previously allocated money, House Republicans
would spend a net $65.2 billion on transportation, housing and urban
development, 25% below current levels.
The third bill, which funds congressional operations, could be in
trouble because of opposition from Republicans who say a 4.6% cost
of living adjustment for lawmakers - their first in 15 years - is
unconstitutional.
Even if passed, the House Republican bills have no chance of
succeeding in the Democratic-led Senate or being signed into law by
Democratic President Joe Biden.
But Republicans believe they can strengthen their hand in spending
negotiations with the Senate by passing all 12 bills for fiscal
2024, which began on Oct. 1.
"We need to utilize the new opportunity with the new speaker to take
steps to at least demonstrate that we're taking this seriously,"
said Representative Bob Good, a hardline conservative from Virginia.
While the House has focused on passing spending bills with only
Republican votes, the Senate has worked on measures that have
bipartisan support.
Some Republicans say the severity of the cuts sought by hardliners
ensure that the legislation will not become law.
"I wish these people played chess a little more," Bacon said. "If
they could think two or three moves deeper, we'd be in a better
spot."
(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Scott Malone and Alistair
Bell)
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