Top US Congress Democrat, Republican reach spending deal, starting race
to pass it
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[January 08, 2024]
By Kanishka Singh and Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The top Democrat and Republican in the U.S.
Congress on Sunday agreed on a $1.59 trillion spending deal, setting up
a race for bitterly divided lawmakers to pass the bills that would
appropriate the money before the government begins to shut down this
month.
Since early last year, House of Representatives and Senate
appropriations committees had been unable to agree on the 12 annual
bills needed to fund the government for the fiscal year that began Oct.
1 because of disagreements over the total amount of money to be spent.
When lawmakers return on Monday from a holiday break, those panels will
launch intensive negotiations over how much various agencies, from the
Agriculture and Transportation departments to Homeland Security and
Health and Human Services, get to spend in the fiscal year that runs
through Sept. 30.
They face a Jan. 19 deadline for the first set of bills to move through
Congress and a Feb. 2 deadline for the remainder of them.
There were already some disagreements between the two parties as to what
they had agreed to. Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson said in a
statement that the top-line figure includes $886 billion for defense and
$704 billion for non-defense spending. But Democratic Senate Majority
Leader Chuck Schumer, in a separate statement, said the non-defense
spending figure will be $772.7 billion.
Last month, Congress authorized $886 billion for the Department of
Defense this fiscal year which Democratic President Joe Biden signed
into law. Appropriators will also now fill in the details on how that
will be parceled out.
The non-defense discretionary funding will "protect key domestic
priorities like veterans benefits, healthcare and nutrition assistance"
from cuts sought by some Republicans, Schumer and House Democratic
Leader Hakeem Jeffries said in a joint statement.
Last spring, Biden and then-House Speaker Kevin McCarthy reached a deal
on the $1.59 trillion in fiscal 2024 spending, along with an increase in
borrowing authority to avoid a historic U.S. debt default.
But immediately after that was enacted, a fight broke out over a
separate, private agreement by the two men over additional non-defense
spending of around $69 billion.
One Democratic aide on Sunday said that $69 billion in "adjustments" are
part of the deal announced on Sunday.
Another source briefed on the agreement said Republicans won a $6.1
billion "recission" in unspent COVID aid money.
FALSE DAWN?
The agreement on a top line spending number could amount to little more
than a false dawn, if hardline House Republicans make good on threats to
block spending legislation unless Democrats agree to restrict the flow
of migrants across the U.S.-Mexico border -- or if they balk at the deal
hammered out by Johnson and Schumer.
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The U.S. Capitol building is seen in Washington, U.S., April 6,
2023. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File Photo
Hardline conservative House Freedom Caucus criticized the spending
deal reached on Sunday, describing it as a "total failure" in a
statement on social media platform X.
Biden said on Sunday the deal moved the country one step closer to
"preventing a needless government shutdown and protecting important
national priorities."
"It reflects the funding levels that I negotiated with both
parties," Biden said in a statement after the deal was announced.
Top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell said he was encouraged by the
agreement.
"America faces serious national security challenges, and Congress
must act quickly to deliver the full-year resources this moment
requires," he said in a statement.
Unless both chambers of Congress - the Republican-controlled House
and the Democratic-majority Senate - succeed in passing the 12 bills
needed to fully fund the government, money will expire on Jan. 19
for federal programs involving transportation, housing, agriculture,
energy, veterans and military construction. Funding for other
government areas, including defense, will continue through Feb. 2.
House Republican hardliner Chip Roy said the top line spending
figure agreed on Sunday was "terrible."
In his letter, Johnson said the "final spending levels will not
satisfy everyone, and they do not cut as much spending as many of us
would like."
The past year has been chaotic for Congress, where Republicans
pushed Washington to the brink of default and then paralyzed the
body for weeks as they deposed one House speaker and struggled to
find a replacement. Congress also came within hours of a government
shutdown in September.
Johnson's narrow 220-213 majority has been reduced by one since No.
2 Republican Steve Scalise will not be casting votes as he undergoes
cancer treatment. Johnson's predecessor, McCarthy, was ousted by his
own party after passing a bill averting a government shutdown that
required Democratic votes to pass.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh, Richard Cowan, David Morgan and Jason
Lange; Editing by Scott Malone, Caitlin Webber, Bill Berkrot,
Cynthia Osterman and Diane Craft)
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