Colorado Politics

House passes Speaker Johnson’s continuing resolution in first step to avoid shutdown

Despite staunch conservative opposition, the House passed Speaker Mike Johnson’s two-step continuing resolution to keep the government funded just days before the shutdown deadline, sending it to the Senate, which is expected to pass the bill.

The continuing resolution had no spending cuts or conservative policy riders attached to it, which led to more Democrats supporting the legislation than Republicans. It passed, 336-95, with 93 Republicans voting against it.

“This legislation is necessary to avoid a harmful government shutdown,” said Rep. Hal Rogers, a Republican from Kentucky, in urging Republicans to back the short-term funding plan.

While House Democrats called the approach flawed, Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries ultimately supported the plan, and Democrats gave Johnson the two-thirds votes necessary to pass the bill under suspension of the rules.

“Once again, the Republican majority needs Democratic votes to govern,” Rep. Rosa DeLauro, a Democrat from Connecticut, said ahead of the vote.

The bill would extend the Agriculture, Military Construction and Veterans Affairs, Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Energy and Water appropriations bills until Jan. 19 and the remaining eight bills until Feb. 2.

The idea behind this two-step approach is that it would create a sense of urgency to pass individual appropriations bills during the time frame and avoid an omnibus or another continuing resolution. Then, Congress would focus on passing the first four appropriations bills before Jan. 19, and then after that, it would focus on getting the remaining bills passed before the February deadline.

The bill does not include any aid to Ukraine or Israel and does not provide for an extension to Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act 702 authorities. However, it does provide for an extension to the expired farm bill provisions through September 2024.

The measure is expected to pass the Senate and be signed into law by President Joe Biden to avoid a government shutdown at midnight Friday.

Now, the race is on to pass all 12 appropriations bills by the two deadlines, which some are skeptical can happen in time as the House Republican Conference has had trouble agreeing on appropriations bills all Congress.

Tags

PREV

PREVIOUS

Tim Burchett accuses 'bully' Kevin McCarthy of elbowing him as tempers erupt in Congress

The House has been in session for 10 straight weeks, and it is about to burst at the seams as tension between members is high and emotions are boiling over. “This place is a pressure cooker,” House Speaker Mike Johnson said Tuesday at his weekly press conference. And nothing reflected this more than just minutes […]

NEXT

NEXT UP

DeSantis denounces Haley's call to ban online anonymity as 'dangerous and unconstitutional'

Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida denounced former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley’s call to ban online anonymity as “dangerous and unconstitutional.” On Tuesday, Haley called for banning anonymous posts on the internet, arguing it was a “national security threat.” DeSantis responded on Wednesday, criticizing the idea as being against free speech and pointing out that […]


Welcome Back.

Streak: 9 days i

Stories you've missed since your last login:

Stories you've saved for later:

Recommended stories based on your interests:

Edit my interests