With government funding set to expire on Thursday, Congress careened toward another standoff on Monday as House Republicans moved ahead with a temporary spending measure that Senate Democrats have promised to block.
By late Monday night, lawmakers had barely 72 hours remaining to avert another government shutdown following last month’s three-day closure, and their precise path for keeping the government open remained unclear.
At the same time, congressional leaders appeared to be closing in on a deal to raise strict caps on military and domestic spending, a pact that would help pave the way for a long-term spending package.
That package, in turn, would end the need for the seemingly endless series of temporary spending measures that have left lawmakers exasperated while repeatedly raising the threat of a government shutdown.
House Republicans emerged from a closed-door meeting on Monday night with a plan to pass a temporary spending measure that would fund the government through March 23. The measure would also include full-year funding for the Defense Department — boosting military spending, as President Donald Trump and Republicans are determined to do — and it would include two years of funding for community health centers.
But the House’s approach, to combine short-term funding to keep the government open with long-term funding for the military, was long ago rejected by most Senate Democrats, who want to pair an increase in military spending with a similar increase in domestic spending. The measure would need 60 votes to pass the Senate, where Republicans hold only 51 seats.
Still, the inclusion of the military funding is expected to secure the votes of reluctant Republicans in the House, including members of the conservative Freedom Caucus, allowing party leaders to push the measure through their chamber even if the vast majority of Democrats oppose it.
“It’s a good play call,” said Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., the chairman of the Freedom Caucus, who just last week had suggested his caucus was not likely to support another temporary spending measure.
On Monday, Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, the Senate Democratic leader, warned House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin against such an approach, saying it amounted to “barreling headfirst into a dead end.”
“If he lets the Freedom Caucus be the tail that wags the dog, there’s no way we’ll reach an agreement that can pass the Senate,” Schumer said on the Senate floor.
Lacking the votes to approve the temporary spending measure paired with long-term military funding, the Senate could strip out the military portion and send the measure back to the House.
“I think everyone understands that this will probably end up being a Ping-Pong situation, and we’ll see where the ball lands,” said Rep. Carlos Curbelo, R-Fla.
But Meadows was eager for a fight over the military funding. “That’s going to be up to Democrats to decide whether they want to continue to keep our military men and women hostage,” he said.
To bring an end to last month’s brief shutdown, lawmakers approved a temporary spending bill that keeps the government open through the end of Thursday. Now another stopgap measure is needed. Adding to the tight timeline facing lawmakers, House Democrats are scheduled to hold a retreat in Maryland beginning Wednesday.
“Here we are again,” Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the No. 2 Senate Republican, said on the Senate floor on Monday, before complaining about the use of one stopgap bill after another. “Governing is not a merry-go-round,” he said.
The stopgap bills have been needed because congressional leaders have yet to reach a deal to raise the caps on military and domestic spending, a step they must take before negotiating a long-term spending bill. There were signs of hope on Monday that an agreement could be within reach.
Once a deal on those spending levels has been reached, lawmakers can put together a long-term funding bill that would stretch for the rest of the fiscal year. In the near future, lawmakers also need to raise the debt limit.
Another big question mark is the issue of immigration, which has helped make a deal on the spending caps elusive and played a central role in last month’s shutdown. Lawmakers are looking to take action following Trump’s decision last year to end an Obama-era program, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, that shields from deportation young immigrants who were brought to the country illegally as children.
On Monday, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who has been absent from the Senate while he battles brain cancer, teamed up with Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., to offer a narrow immigration bill that would protect the young unauthorized immigrants, known as Dreamers, from deportation, while also seeking to strengthen border security.
Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Senate majority leader, has promised an open debate on immigration legislation in the Senate if lawmakers do not reach a deal on that subject by Thursday. Coons told reporters that his bill could serve as the underlying measure to form the foundation of that debate, calling it a “strong starting point.”
But the McCain-Coons bill, intended as the Senate counterpart to a bipartisan bill in the House, is slimmer than the framework proposed by Trump. Notably, it does not include the $25 billion Trump requested for border security, including for a wall along the southern border with Mexico.
In addition, the measure does not address the diversity visa lottery, which fosters immigration from countries that are underrepresented and which Trump wants to abolish, or family-based migration, which would be severely limited under the White House proposal.
On Monday, the White House rejected the McCain-Coons plan, just as it turned away a different bipartisan proposal put forth last month by a group of senators led by Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Richard J. Durbin, D-Ill.
Trump, without mentioning McCain or Coons by name, wrote on Twitter on Monday that any DACA deal that does not include a border wall was “a total waste of time.”
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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