Government Shutdown Averted as Senate Passes Stopgap Spending Bill

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The Senate passed a one-week government spending bill and President Donald Trump signed it Dec. 11, avertingĢża government shutdown.
The Senate voice vote approving the legislation came after several senators tried to hold the process up as they sought to force votes on unrelated issues. Those objections were overcome Dec. 11, and the Senateās approval, after the House passed it on 343-67 vote Dec. 9, sent the bill to Trumpās desk.
The short-term spending bill was necessary because none of the 12 annual appropriations bills for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1 have been enacted and negotiations on an omnibus package wrapping them altogether havenāt been completed.
Lawmakers are also hoping to use the omnibus bill as a vehicle for more than $900 billion in coronavirus-related aid.
The virus-relief bill has been the subject of months of fruitless negotiations, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Dec. 10 both said they see progress toward a final solution. But there is still no agreement on provisions to shield businesses from COVID-related lawsuits and to distribute $160 billion in proposed state and local aid. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Dec. 11 again suggested leaving those provisions out of the stimulus package.
The broader spending bill appears to be more on track, even though Senate Appropriations Chairman Richard Shelby, an Alabama Republican, said it probably wonāt be finished until next week. He said the main sticking point is how to handle $12.5 billion for the Department of Veterans Affairs to upgrade its health care for veterans.
Shelby has said he agrees with Democrats that the funding should be in addition to the $1.4 trillion budget cap for the year, but the White House and House Republicans oppose the move, citing deficit concerns.
āI think the obstacle right now is at least a hurdle to get over the VA,ā Shelby said Dec. 11. āAnd I think we could see open field after that, but maybe notā
Other points of contention involve $2 billion for Trumpās border wall, as well as funding for immigration raids and detention. Shelby said appropriators are nearing an agreement on that issue, but itās not yet clear whether it will āsatisfy everybody.ā
Montana Sen.ĢżJon Tester, the top Democrat on the subcommittee overseeing the °®¶¹“«Ć½land Security Department, told reporters he thinks differences on the wall and immigration can be resolved.
āI donāt anticipate thatāll be a problem,ā he said. āI think we could have gotten this done by the 11th if we hadnāt gotten into the habit of settling deadlines and then never meeting them.ā
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