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Shutdown looms as US Senate, House advance separate spending plans

Published Sep 28, 2023 05:02AM ET Updated Sep 28, 2023 11:51PM ET
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© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A general view of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S. September 25, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
 
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By Moira Warburton and David Morgan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Democratic-led U.S. Senate forged ahead on Thursday with a bipartisan stopgap funding bill aimed at averting a fourth partial government shutdown in a decade, while the House began voting on partisan Republican spending bills with no chance of becoming law.

The divergent paths of the two chambers increased the odds that federal agencies will run out of money on Sunday, furloughing hundreds of thousands of federal workers and halting a wide range of services from economic data releases to nutrition benefits.

The House of Representatives passed three of four bills funding parts of the government, though the partisan bills would not alone prevent a shutdown, even if they could overcome strong opposition from Senate Democrats and become law.

The Senate earlier in the day had voted 76-22 to open debate on a stopgap bill known as a continuing resolution, or CR, which would extend federal spending until Nov. 17, and authorize roughly $6 billion each for domestic disaster response funding and aid to Ukraine to defend itself against Russia.

The Senate measure has already been rejected by Republicans, who control the House.

House Republicans, led by a small faction of hardline conservatives in the chamber they control by a 221-212 margin, have rejected spending levels for fiscal year 2024 set in a deal Speaker Kevin McCarthy negotiated with Biden in May.

The agreement included $1.59 trillion in discretionary spending in fiscal 2024. House Republicans are demanding another $120 billion in cuts, plus tougher legislation that would stop the flow of immigrants at the U.S. southern border with Mexico.

The funding fight focuses on a relatively small slice of the $6.4 trillion U.S. budget for this fiscal year. Lawmakers are not considering cuts to popular benefit programs such as Social Security and Medicare.

McCarthy is facing intense pressure from his caucus to cut spending and achieve other conservative priorities. Several hardliners have threatened to oust him from his leadership role if he passes a spending bill that requires any Democratic votes to pass.

The House defeated a bill on agriculture funding by a 237-191 margin. Twenty-seven of McCarthy's Republicans rejected it, mostly moderates in competitive districts who were worried about steep cuts to funding, as well as a provision limiting access to abortion medication.

Former President Donald Trump has taken to social media to push his congressional allies toward a shutdown.

McCarthy, for his part, suggested on Thursday that a shutdown could be avoided if Senate Democrats agreed to address border issues in their stopgap measure.

"I talked this morning to some Democratic senators over there that are more aligned with what we want to do. They want to do something about the border," McCarthy told reporters in the U.S. Capitol.

"We're trying to work to see, could we put some border provisions in that current Senate bill that would actually make things a lot better," he said.

The House Freedom Caucus, home to the hardliners forcing McCarthy's hand, in an open letter to him on Thursday demanded a timeline for passing the seven remaining appropriations bills and a plan to further reduce the top-line discretionary spending figure, among other questions.

"No Member of Congress can or should be expected to consider supporting a stop-gap funding measure without answers to these reasonable questions," the letter, led by the group's chair, Republican Representative Scott Perry, read.

'ONE OPTION TO AVOID A SHUTDOWN'

The Senate measure has passed two procedural hurdles this week with strong bipartisan support.

"Congress has only one option - one option - to avoid a shutdown: bipartisanship," Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said on Thursday. "With bipartisanship, we can responsibly fund the government and avoid the sharp and unnecessary pain for the American people and the economy that a shutdown will bring."

Credit agencies have warned that brinkmanship and political polarization are harming the U.S. financial outlook. Moody's (NYSE:MCO), the last major ratings agency to rate the U.S. government "Aaa" with a stable outlook, said on Monday that a shutdown would harm the country's credit rating.

Fitch, another major ratings agency, already downgraded the U.S. government to "AA+" after Congress flirted with defaulting on the nation's debt earlier this year.

Shutdown looms as US Senate, House advance separate spending plans
 

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Comments (8)
Stephen Fa
Stephen Fa Sep 29, 2023 7:23AM ET
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So, the Senate Democrats and team Biden veto will shutdown parts of the government that the House funded.
Mr Baldy
Mr Baldy Sep 29, 2023 5:03AM ET
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By cutting their salary we safe those 120 billions. Be side they only work 9 month of the years.
Maximus Maximus
Maximus Maximus Sep 29, 2023 5:03AM ET
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wow, you trolls need some serious tutoring...
Maximus Maximus
Maximus Maximus Sep 28, 2023 11:28PM ET
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meanwhile, the republican still find time and taxpayers money to waste, on their big nothingburger where they just admitted they have zero evidence to impeach Biden...
Deepak Agrawal
Deepak Agrawal Sep 28, 2023 11:19PM ET
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Its all a political drama. Everyday govt works country loose lot of money. I hope they keep it down gor a month or two.
Maximus Maximus
Maximus Maximus Sep 28, 2023 11:19PM ET
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so, no money for things like defence, water-treatment, garbage disposal, public schools, roads and infrastructure.. what do you think India would look like after a month or two of that...?
Stephen Fa
Stephen Fa Sep 28, 2023 5:49PM ET
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We'll save $12 billion a day in federal deficit spending while shutdown.
Maximus Maximus
Maximus Maximus Sep 28, 2023 5:49PM ET
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fa.. is there no end to your nonsense? ..and, as a bonus, the fed will be flying blind as there will be no inflation reports coming out either...
Santosh Oak
Santosh Oak Sep 28, 2023 5:21PM ET
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In any case they all want to print more $. More and more$., How long can such a situation continue? Something has to give.I suspect it will be the economy.
Tango Down
TangoDown Sep 28, 2023 11:33AM ET
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This country is run by Godless fools; devoid of all morals, reason and integrity. The farther away from God  and His principles we stray the worse it will get.
Brad Albright
Brad Albright Sep 28, 2023 11:33AM ET
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Agreed! Bring back the man who brags of accosting women, who paid a porn star for sex while his wife was pregnant, who was found by a jury to have forced himself onto a woman against her will, who lies and cheats day after day. That will bring us closer to God.
Stephen Fa
Stephen Fa Sep 28, 2023 11:33AM ET
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Brad would vote for Hunter Biden.
Maximus Maximus
Maximus Maximus Sep 28, 2023 11:33AM ET
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fa hunter is no politician nor a candidate..you can't vote for him, you absolute m(oron)..
Chris Poulos
Chris Poulos Sep 28, 2023 10:04AM ET
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interesting situation ... somehow i dont think that i am getting the whole picture. earlier articles suggested this was about trying to balance the budget and cut spending which has gotten out of hand over the last 40 years. deficit spending which started during the reagan administration has become the norm and now the country is in massive debt. why is it so controversial and difficult to only spend the amount of money that is actually available? even if they do balance the budget AND start paying off the debt it will take decades to make any progress on the trillions that are owed.
 
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