Congress closing in on shutdown deadline with no clear plan

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Congress is struggling to strike a deal to maintain the federal government funded as a looming deadline to stop a shutdown subsequent month will get nearer.

Lawmakers are lower than a month away from a mid-March date to cross laws to stop a funding lapse — or danger the primary shutdown in years. 

“We can’t have precisely the same kind of deal we had before, and we’re trying to work to find some common ground,” Home Appropriations Chair Tom Cole (R-Okla.) mentioned shortly earlier than the Home left for a one-week recess this week.

Negotiators on each side have been working to strike a spending deal for weeks, with hopes of crafting the 12 annual funding payments that might make it out of each chambers with bipartisan help – and throughout President Trump’s desk for signature.

However additionally they say the duty has gotten harder as fallout spreads over a sweeping operation undertaken by the Trump administration to reshape the federal authorities.  

“We cannot come to a deal where you hammer out gains, losses, but you come to a conclusion and you come to a meeting of the minds,” Rep. Rosa DeLauro (Conn.), the highest Democrat on the Home Appropriations Committee, instructed reporters. “That should not be subject to some third party deciding that that’s not what they want.”

“We had a deal last year, all of us and so forth, and then there was an interloper with no authority, no legitimacy, non-elected, who said, ‘Don’t vote for it,’” DeLauro mentioned, as Democrats have continued to zero in on tech billionaire Elon Musk, the top of Trump’s “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE).

DeLauro and Cole have each continued to press for a deal on a topline settlement on how a lot to fund the federal government for fiscal 12 months 2025 – a key step to kick off work on hashing out annual funding payments. However there’s rising acknowledgement {that a} stopgap of some type is critical as Congress hurtles towards a March 14 deadline to maintain the lights on with no clear plan on easy methods to forestall a funding lapse.

Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has left the door open to the concept of a stopgap, often known as a unbroken decision (CR), that might run by the top of the fiscal 12 months. The concept has some help from conservatives who need to see funding ranges saved flat by September, even when it locks in continued spending in keeping with a few of former President Biden’s funding priorities within the meantime. Nonetheless, some Republicans are resisting the concept.

Home Armed Companies Committee Chair Mike Rogers (R-Ala.) instructed The Hill final week that he thinks a “full-year CR is just a knuckleheaded approach,” including he wouldn’t again the concept “unless it holds defense harmless.”

“It would have to be like we passed an appropriations bill for defense,” he mentioned, when requested by reporters what sort of adjustments could be crucial for him to help a stopgap by the top of the fiscal 12 months. 

“I don’t like full-year CRs,” Rep. Steve Womack (R-Ark.), a spending cardinal, additionally mentioned plainly final week when requested concerning the prospect of such an concept, although he added that he didn’t know if the proposal is extra possible as Congress continues to run months behind in tying up its funding work. 

“We’ll see. We need to do our work,” he mentioned. 

Some Republicans have bold hopes of resorting to a wonky process referred to as “budget reconciliation” to cross a partisan funding bundle that might increase {dollars} in areas like border and protection forward of the mid-March deadline. The measure would enable Republicans to bypass a 60-vote threshold wanted for many payments to cross the Senate, permitting them to get previous possible Democratic opposition. 

“It’d be really helpful if we had $150 billion of new money before March 14, because the discussions about funding the government are dramatically different,” Senate Price range Committee Chair Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) instructed The Hill final week, as he pushes his GOP colleagues within the Home and Senate to get behind the technique to advance elements of Trump’s agenda.

Including to issues, nonetheless, Home Republicans are nonetheless pushing to take the lead on a reconciliation bundle that might additionally plus up border and protection funds, however would moreover greenlight trillions of {dollars} in tax cuts and vital spending cuts.

Congress can be staring down the specter of automated cuts to federal applications after April 30 beneath earlier settlement struck between GOP management and former President Biden in 2023 to boost the debt ceiling. 

Cole has mentioned that lawmakers ought to have the ability to keep away from triggering these cuts within the occasion Congress passes a full-year stopgap, although appropriators are nonetheless holding out for full-year funding payments. 

“It’s a month away,” Rep. Mark Amodei (R-Nev.), head of the subcommittee that oversees funding for the Division of Homeland Safety, instructed The Hill. “We’re the guys who passed s— the day before. Joe Biden was signing stuff at midnight.”

“My understanding was that Patty Murray, Rosa DeLauro and Tom Cole were about $14 billion apart,” he added, when discussing the state of topline discussions final week. “That’s a hell of a lot of money, but in the context of the overall budget, that’s kind of big dust particles.”

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