The Traffic Tickets Looked Routine. The Pattern Behind Them Didn’t.
Jasmine Crockett Might Be Getting Nervous After This Poll
Here's How Republicans Feel About Trump's Greenland Plan
FBI Serves Subpoenas to Offices of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, AG Keith Ellison,...
After Losing Government Immigration Money, Catholic Bishops Question America’s ‘Moral Role...
Hijab Solidarity? No, Thank You.
Exclusive: Bombshell Footage Claims Judges Can Be Bought With Bribes in Ohio Immigration...
Flashback: Here's What Don Lemon Once Said About the Kidnapping and Torture of...
Activist Tried Going Toe-to-Toe With Scott Jennings. It Did Not Go Well for...
AG Uthmeier: Man Accused of Killing Three Near Disney Had Prior Charges Dismissed...
Trump Dumps ATF Merger Plan
You Won't Believe These Deleted Posts by Mamdani's Equity Chief
President Trump Trolls Europe With These AI-Generated Images
Keith Ellison Defends Church Storming As 'Free Speech' After ICE Protest Shuts Down...
Trump Blasts the Media for Its ICE Obsession, While Tim Walz's Fraud Fades...
Tipsheet

Shutdown Averted? House Passes Stopgap Funding Measure, Off To The Senate

While the media, Democrats, Republicans, and President Trump were either preaching doomsday or basking in the afterglow of sweet victory, a government shutdown was looming. The two-week continuing resolution passed earlier this month was set to expire Friday at midnight. The government is funded through January 19 but has a few riders concerning disaster relief, defense, and reauthorizes the Foreign intelligence Surveillance Act. Children’s Health Insurance Program has also been reauthorized through March 31. Roll Call has more:

Advertisement

House Republicans took the first step Thursday toward avoiding a partial shutdown when they passed a stopgap measure to fund the government through Jan. 19.

The chamber voted in favor of a continuing resolution, 231-188, sending the measure to the Senate where it’s expected to pass later Thursday or early Friday. Without the stopgap — the third such measure deployed for fiscal 2018 — funding would expire at midnight Friday.

The House also passed an $81 billion disaster supplemental to provide continued relief to states and U.S. territories impacted by hurricanes and wildfires. But in the Senate Democrats raised concerns about the measure and suggested they might not vote for it, which would push the supplemental to January.

The CR through Jan. 19 is not a “clean” spending bill in that it includes several attachments. It reauthorizes Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act through the same date, funds the Children’s Health Insurance Program and community health centers through March 31 and appropriates $2.1 billion for a private care access program for veterans known as the Veterans Choice Program.

The measure also includes defense anomalies — $4 billion for missile defense and $700 million for Navy ship repairs — to get around the sequestration spending cap. A provision to waive the statutory pay-as-you-go rule on the tax overhaul bill to avoid sharp automatic cuts to mandatory spending programs was also added to the CR.

Advertisement

Even if it was clean, Democrats signaled that they weren’t going to vote for more spending bills until the GOP gets serious the issue mentioned above.  It seems like they did, and added an $81 billion disaster relief rider, but Democrats didn’t lift a finger to help their Republican counterparts pass this spending bill. It seems their intransigence had a unifying effect.

“In a sense, I think the Democrats not being willing to vote for it has certainly helped us bring everybody together,” said Rep. Tom Cole (R-OK). So, it seems Democrats are a party that votes against middle class tax relief and for keeping the government open. 

As the measure heads into the Senate, Politico reports that the disaster provision might not make it due to Democratic opposition. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos