By Kevin Freking | Associated Press
WASHINGTON â House Republicans unveiled a spending bill Saturday that would keep federal agencies funded through Sept. 30, pushing ahead with a go-it-alone strategy that seems certain to spark a major confrontation with Democrats over the contours of government spending.
The 99-page bill would provide a slight boost to defense programs while trimming nondefense programs below 2024 budget year levels. That approach is likely to be a nonstarter for most Democrats who have long insisted that defense and nondefense spending move in the same direction.
Congress must act by midnight Friday to avoid a partial government shutdown.
Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is teeing up the bill for a vote on Tuesday despite the lack of buy-in from Democrats, essentially daring them to vote against it and risk a shutdown. He also is betting that Republicans can muscle the legislation through the House largely by themselves.
Normally, when it comes to keeping the government fully open for business, Republicans have had to work with Democrats to craft a bipartisan measure that both sides can support. Thatâs because Republicans almost always lack the votes to pass spending bills on their own.
Crucially, the strategy has the backing of President Donald Trump, who has shown an ability so far in his term to hold Republicans in line.
Trump praised the bill, posting on his Truth Social platform that Republicans have to âremain UNITED â NO DISSENT â Fight for another day when the timing is right.â
âGreat things are coming for America, and I am asking you all to give us a few months to get us through to September so we can continue to put the Countryâs âfinancial houseâ in order,â he said.
House Republicansâ leadership staff outlined the contours of the measure, saying it would allow for about $892.5 billion in defense spending and about $708 billion in nondefense spending. The defense spending is slightly above the prior yearâs level, but the nondefense spending, the aides said, was about $13 billion below last year.
The measure also will not include funding requested by individual lawmakers for thousands of community projects around the country, often referred to as earmarks.
But Republicans noted that it would provide for the largest pay increase to junior enlisted servicemembers in more than 40 years, and it included an additional $500 million for a nutritional assistance program for women, infants and young children.
The bill does not cover the majority of government spending, including programs such as Social Security and Medicare. Funding for those two programs are on auto pilot and are not regularly reviewed by Congress.
The top Democrats on the House and Senate Appropriations Committees, Connecticut Rep. Rosa DeLauro and Washington Sen. Patty Murray, both issued statements blasting the legislation.
âI strongly oppose this full-year continuing resolution,â DeLauro said.
Murray said the legislation would âgive Donald Trump and Elon Musk more power over federal spending â and more power to pick winners and losers, which threatens families in blue and red states alike.â
Maine Sen. Susan Collins, who heads the Senate Appropriations Committee, said the focus must be on preventing a shutdown because closures have negative consequences all across government.
âThey require certain essential government employees, such as Border Patrol agents, members of our military and Coast Guard, TSA screeners, and air traffic controllers, to report to work with no certainty on when they will receive their next paycheck,â Collins said. âWe cannot allow that to occur.â
Trumpâs request for unity appears to be having an effect. Some conservatives who almost never vote for continuing resolutions expressed much openness to one last week.
Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C., says he has never voted for a continuing resolution, what lawmakers often call a CR, but he is on board with Johnsonâs effort. He says he has confidence in Trump and the Department of Government Efficiency, led by Elon Musk, to make a difference on the nationâs debt.
âI donât like CRs,â Norman said. âBut whatâs the alternative? Negotiate with Democrats? No.â
âI freeze spending for six months to go identify more cuts? Somebody tell me how thatâs not a win in Washington,â added Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, another lawmaker who has often frequently voted against spending bills but supports the six-month continuing resolution.
Republicans are also hoping that resolving this yearâs spending will allow them to devote their full attention to extending the individual tax cuts passed during Trumpâs first term and raising the nationâs debt limit to avoid a catastrophic federal default.
Democratic leaders are warning that the decision to move ahead without consulting them increases the prospects for a shutdown. One of their biggest concerns is the flexibility the legislation would give the Trump administration on spending.
The Democratic leadership in both chambers has stressed that Republicans have the majority and are responsible for funding the government. But leaders also have been wary of saying how Democrats would vote on a continuing resolution.
âWe have to wait to see what their plan is,â said Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York. âWeâve always believed the only solution is a bipartisan solution, no matter what.â
House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York said earlier this week that the Democratic caucus would meet and discuss the legislation at the âappropriate moment.â But he struck a more forceful tone Friday.
Jeffries said Democrats are ready to negotiate a âmeaningful, bipartisan spending agreement that puts working people first.â But he said the âpartisan continuing resolutionâ threatens to cut funding for key programs, such as veterans benefits and nutritional assistance for low-income families.
âThat is not acceptable,â Jeffries said.
Trump has been meeting with House Republicans in an effort to win their votes on the legislation. Republicans have a 218-214 majority in the House, so if all lawmakers vote, they can afford only one defection if Democrats unite in opposition. The math gets even harder in the Senate, where at least seven Democrats would have to vote for the legislation to overcome a filibuster. And thatâs assuming all 53 Republicans vote for it.
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