• Tuesday, 24 December 2024

US Senate passes stopgap funding bill, averts shutdown

US Senate passes stopgap funding bill, averts shutdown

Washington, 1 October 2023 (tca/dpa/MIA) — US House of Representatives Republican leaders muscled through a 48-day government funding patch Saturday with broad bipartisan support, drawing critical backing from some Democrats who just hours earlier criticized the bill and how quickly GOP leaders were trying to push it through.

 

The 335-91 vote sends the package to the Senate, where lawmakers all morning had been waiting for the smoke signal from their colleagues across the Capitol. Republicans in the Senate had been stalling for time to see the outcome of the House vote on the package, which excludes Ukraine aid but otherwise is largely in line with the bipartisan Senate version that was awaiting a cloture vote.

 

Earlier, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said his GOP colleagues would oppose cloture on the Senate version because "there may be a bipartisan agreement coming from the House." With that bipartisan agreement en route, a partial government shutdown that many lawmakers thought a fait accompli starting at midnight might yet be avoided.

 

"We're going to finish tonight," Senator Kyrsten Sinema, Independent from Arizona, said after the House vote as she was heading in to the office of Senate Minority Whip John Thune, Republican South Dakota.

 

A White House official suggested President Joe Biden was likely to sign the measure, pointing out the House-backed continuing resolution would not cut spending, has no restrictive border policies and contains important disaster aid and other provisions. The official also said the White House expects a follow-on Ukraine aid bill to pass in both chambers.

 

Senate Democrats met Saturday afternoon to discuss next steps, but all signs were pointing towards Senate acceptance of the package after the lopsided House vote.

 

"I'm just happy cooler heads are prevailing and we'll have no shutdown," Senator Joe Manchin III, Democrat, West Virginia, said.

 

Still, objections over the lack of funding for Ukraine led at least one senator, Michael Bennet of Colorado, to hold up the package Saturday night.

 

The bipartisan House measure marks a sharp turnaround from 24 hours earlier, when a very partisan and conservative House stopgap measure, with nearly 30% cuts to most domestic programs and tough border restrictions, went down to defeat.

 

No Democrats supported it and 21 Republicans opposed it as well, which was the last straw for Speaker Kevin McCarthy and his allies who realized there was no way some of their members would vote to keep the government open.

 

"Today wasn't the choice we wanted to have. We tried to pass the most conservative stopgap measure possible," McCarthy told reporters after the vote. "Unfortunately we didn't have 218 Republicans that would vote for it."

 

The latest House stopgap bill passed with the support of 126 Republicans, while 90 GOP lawmakers voted "no." Only one Democrat, Representative Mike Quigley, Democrat, Illinois, opposed it, over the omission of Ukraine aid. Quigley is co-chair of the Congressional Ukraine Caucus.

 

Representative Matt Gaetz, Republican, Florida, who's been threatening a motion to oust McCarthy if he brings a bipartisan stopgap bill to the floor, didn't get the chance on Saturday.

 

After House passage, Representative Stephanie Bice, Republican, Oklahoma, quickly moved to adjourn the chamber, and Steve Womack, Republican Arkansas, the presiding officer, banged the gavel before Gaetz could offer the motion to vacate. That move closed up the House until Monday, which is the earliest Gaetz could make his move.

 

Since the House has gaveled out, senators may have little choice but take up the House version to avoid a shutdown.

 

The House moved quickly earlier Saturday to take up the 71-page bill, introduced shortly before floor debate began.

 

The apparent move by McCarthy to ignore critics in his conference who've threatened to try to oust him surprised Democrats, who stalled for time to discuss the measure in a closed-door meeting by calling for a vote on a motion to adjourn.

 

The legislation, unveiled shortly after a 90-minute House GOP meeting Saturday morning, largely mirrors the continuing resolution that the Senate is considering.

 

The turn of events in the House had Senate Republicans reevaluating their options, and stalled for their own time in a closed-door meeting.

 

The House bill contains $10 billion extra for disaster relief, for a total of $16 billion, matching the White House request. It's got another major difference from the Senate version no money to support Ukraine in its battle against Russia, nor does it have an extension for expiring Ukrainian refugee benefits.

 

"The appeasement strategy of the far right does not have majority support in this body," House Appropriations ranking member Rosa DeLauro, Democrat, Connecticut, said in opposition to the bill during floor debate. She inserted into the record a letter from Undersecretary of Defense Michael McCord to lawmakers saying that the Pentagon has no more money to train Ukrainian solders and just $1.6 billion left to replenish stocks of US weapons and equipment sent to Ukraine.

 

Democrats also blasted the measure for initially omitting the annual statutory provision blocking a pay raise for lawmakers, though Republicans pointed out they will have a chance to debate that provision next week during floor debate on the Legislative Branch spending bill.

 

Republicans must have had a change of heart after hearing concerns, however. After debate on the stopgap bill resumed Saturday, Legislative Branch Appropriations Subcommittee Chairman Mark Amodei, Republican Nevada, said Republicans would fix it to "include the Senate's genius language" blocking the member pay raise. The House then agreed by unanimous consent to add the Senate provision to the bill.

 

The House bill also drops some "anomalies" from the Senate version that would allow higher funding rates for pandemic preparedness and federal student aid administration. DeLauro's staff circulated a memo highlighting differences with the Senate version in the House's "not so clean" CR.

 

But it also mirrors Senate provisions that would extend the expiring Federal Aviation Administration authorization through December 31 and extend authorizations for the National Flood Insurance Program and community health centers through the CR's duration, all provisions popular with Democrats. And there are no cuts to current funding levels during the stopgap period.

 

DeLauro ultimately backed the bill, as did most Democrats.

 

House Democrats seemed conflicted on the measure earlier. Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Minority Whip Katherine M. Clark, Democrat Massachusetts, raced to the floor to call for a timeout, saying their request for 90 minutes to read the bill had been denied.

 

"We have serious trust issues," Clark said, instead offering a motion to adjourn. Then Democrats went behind closed doors to meet.

 

Part of the House Democrats' effort to buy time: seeing what happens in the Senate with that chamber's previously scheduled cloture vote.

 

Ann McLane Kuster, Democrat New-Hampshire, earlier said Democrats wanted to see if the Senate vote gives their side leverage to insist on Ukraine funding being attached. She said there's "quite a bit of interest" among House Democrats in the GOP-drafted bill, if it was truly a clean extension of fiscal 2023 funding and included authorizations.

 

"Already, we know of some things that are not the same," Kuster said. "Look, we do our homework. Give us a few minutes, let us look it through, but there's nobody in our caucus that wants to shut down."

 

After Democrats' meeting broke and the motion to adjourn was rejected, Jeffries took to the floor and launched into a "magic minute" speech - a privilege afforded party leaders to speak as long as they want, well beyond one minute. There was even an incident involving a pulled fire alarm which some attributed to dilatory tactics - an accusation the perpetrator, Representative Jamaal Bowman, Democrtat, New York, denied.

 

In the Senate, the emergence of McCarthy's new plan appeared to be strengthening GOP resolve to oppose moving ahead with that chamber's existing bill. That measure already faced a bloc of Republican opposition due to Ukraine aid, and then an effort to negotiate a border security package they favour stalled on Friday.

 

Senate Republicans were meeting behind closed doors before their cloture vote and while the drama was playing out in the House. GOP senators were generally expressing support for the House bill on Saturday, even Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, typically a hawk on funding the Ukraine war effort.

 

Graham said Ukraine can "make it six weeks" without additional aid, lining up roughly with the November 17 end date on the CR. He said a separate border security and Ukraine package could be considered once the stopgap is passed.

 

"The House has made it pretty clear that Ukraine is just a non-starter over there, so I hope the Senate understands that as well," Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin said.

 

Senator Markwayne Mullin, an Oklahoma Republican, said if Schumer chooses not to bring up the House bill, then any shutdown that ensues would be the Democrats' responsibility.

 

"If he doesn't do it, then we have a Schumer shutdown, not a McCarthy shutdown," Mullin said.

 

One thing became clear Saturday morning: McCarthy and most House Republicans were ready to avoid a shutdown and move on.

 

Some House Republicans left their morning meeting believing McCarthy had no choice but to turn to a CR that Democrats would support since there's still a solid GOP bloc that won't vote for any stopgap bill.