After a year of haggling and four stopgap measures, Congress passed the last bill to fund the government through the fiscal year. It did so after briefly breaching the midnight deadline.
House passes $1.2 trillion spending bill but Senate must still act
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Saturday signed legislation funding the government through September, the White House confirmed.
Biden expressed gratitude to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, House Speaker Mike Johnson, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and other members “for their leadership.”
Earlier Saturday morning, the Senate voted 74-24 to pass a sweeping $1.2 trillion government funding bill after heated last-minute negotiations caused senators to breach the midnight deadline to avert a shutdown.
But the funding lapse was brief and technical, having no meaningful impact as the White House said it had “ceased shutdown preparations” due to a Senate agreement, which came after Republicans demanded votes on a series of amendments.
The legislation passed the House on Friday morning by a vote of 268-134.
Biden’s signing of the measure completes a turbulent government funding process during a divided government, featuring a year of haggling, six months of stopgap bills and intense partisan clashes over money and policy along the way.
The full government will now be funded through the end of September, after Congress passed a previous $459 billion tranche of money earlier this month. The total spending level for the fiscal year is $1.659 trillion.
“Nothing’s easy these days,” Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., told NBC News after midnight while the Senate was voting, but said it was significant for Congress to pass all 12 appropriations bills in a year.
“Given the dysfunction of the House and slim majorities here, you know, there’s something to be said for the fact that we finally got this done,” Murphy said.
The new tranche will fund the departments of State, Defense, Labor, Health and Human Services, and Homeland Security, among other parts of the government that had not yet been fully funded.
Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., said it was “typical” and “juvenile” for the Senate to wait until the eleventh hour to act on the bill.
Earlier on Friday, the Senate indicated it had sufficient support to get the bill across the finish line following a 78-18 procedural vote that advanced the measure. Schumer, D-N.Y., announced just before the deadline that both parties had reached an agreement to vote on multiple amendments and then final passage of the bill early Saturday morning.
“It’s been a very long and difficult day, but we have just reached an agreement to complete the job of funding the government,” Schumer announced on the Senate floor just before midnight. “It is good for the country that we have reached this bipartisan deal.”
The divided Congress has narrowly averted multiple shutdowns this session, passing four stopgap bills that kept extending the deadline.And at nearly six months into the fiscal year, it’s unusually late in the game to be haggling over the funding measures. The latest bill was released Thursday and passed by the House on Friday morning, leaving little time for the Senate to act.
For a while, those talks appeared to fall apart midday Friday, with Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., arguing the agreement was scuttled by vulnerable Democrats in key Senate races, claiming they don’t want to have to vote on amendments that could be used against them in their re-election campaigns.
“The bottom line is Democratic senators running for re-election are scared to vote on amendments,” Cotton told reporters, adding without providing evidence: “Jon Tester has said that he would rather have the government shut down and vote on Sunday night then vote on these amendments for you.”
But Tester, a Democrat who is in a tight re-election race in the red state of Montana that could determine the Senate majority, fired back, telling NBC News, “That’s bulls—.”
The back-and-forth came to a head when the two senators were talking to different groups of reporters just feet away from each other off the Senate floor.
“Did Cotton say that they’re holding amendments because of Jon Tester?” Tester yelled at Cotton during the exchange. “Because if he did, he might be full of something that comes off the back of a cow.”
Senators were frustrated by the fact that Congress was able to repeatedly avert funding lapses until now, but struggled to do so on the final funding bill.
“It makes me ill,” Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, said in an interview, adding that she felt “like I’ve had too much sugar and bad pizza” after Senate Republicans were served those items for lunch.
“If we had had salmon, we would have been thinking, because it’s like we’ve all those fine omega-3s,” she said. “We’re just like — we’re a mess of a candy-pizza muddle, we’re operating like teenage boys.”
Source: NBC News