Schumer's move came as Republican House of Representatives
Speaker Mike Johnson faced opposition from within his own narrow
majority to a deal reached with Schumer on a $1.59 trillion
top-line spending number for government agencies in the fiscal
year that began Oct. 1.
Johnson on Thursday held private meetings with some of the
hardline Republicans who have been pushing for deeper spending
cuts.
"I've made no commitment. So if you hear otherwise, it's just
simply not true," Johnson said in response to questions over
whether he was going to renegotiate his agreement with Schumer.
Republican Representative Scott Perry, a senior member of the
hardline House Freedom Caucus, earlier told reporters that
Johnson is open to revisions, with lawmakers working on
language.
"Sure he is. Why wouldn’t he be?” Perry said, before
acknowledging that Johnson had not given the rebel Republicans
any commitment.
Schumer said the Senate can could begin voting on it when it
returns on Tuesday from a Martin Luther King Jr. holiday recess.
Little time remains before funding runs out on Jan. 19 for some
sprawling federal agencies, including the departments of
Agriculture and Transportation.
He did not say now long the stopgap bill would be in effect.
The U.S. came close to a partial government shutdown last fall,
amid opposition by the hardline House Republicans who ousted
Johnson's predecessor, Kevin McCarthy, over reaching a
bipartisan stopgap spending deal with Schumer.
"There are those on the hard right over in the House who think
they can bully their colleagues and the House and the country
into a shutdown," Schumer said.
Johnson will try to restart his party’s legislative machinery on
Thursday, a day after a dozen hardline Republicans shut down the
chamber's legislative business to protest the bipartisan
spending deal.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan and David Morgan; Editing by Scott
Malone and Jonathan Oatis)
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