The two chambers' top Democrats and Republicans had emerged from
what they described as an intense Tuesday meeting with President
Joe Biden vowing to avert a shutdown, but without agreement on
how to do so - whether by reaching a deal covering the fiscal
year that began Oct. 1, or by passing a fourth short-term
stopgap.
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer and House of
Representatives' speaker, Republican Mike Johnson, have traded
blame despite an agreement reached last month on $1.59 trillion
in discretionary spending for the fiscal year.
"We believe that we can get to agreement on these issues and
prevent a government shutdown. And that's our first
responsibility," Johnson told reporters on Tuesday.
Hardliners within his thin Republican majority have sought
spending cuts and policy changes, including some related to
abortion and food aid, on the funding bills, which Democrats
have balked at. Failure to reach an agreement will trigger a
partial government shutdown beginning Saturday.
A second deadline on a larger group of federal agencies that
would run out of funding on March 8 also looms.
Schumer told reporters on Tuesday lawmakers had made progress on
talks to fund the government but had not finalized anything yet.
"There is no reason for a shutdown, not if both sides in both
chambers cooperate in a bipartisan way," Patty Murray, the
Democratic chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, said on
Tuesday.
The impasse comes as the current national debt stands at $34.3
trillion and is rapidly rising. Rating agency Moody'ssaid in
September a government shutdown would hurt the country's credit
rating.
In addition to the government funding bills, Congress is also
struggling to pass a $95 billion national security funding bill,
including new aid for Ukraine and Israel, that Biden has urged.
The Senate passed a bill, but it has been held up in the House.
(Reporting by Makini Brice, Richard Cowan and David Morgan;
Editing by Scott Malone and Lincoln Feast.)
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