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With Federal Shutdown Looming, Spending Bill Fails in US House

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House members depart after Speaker Kevin McCarthy's last-ditch plan to keep the government temporarily open collapsed, at the Capitol in Washington, Sept. 29, 2023.
House members depart after Speaker Kevin McCarthy's last-ditch plan to keep the government temporarily open collapsed, at the Capitol in Washington, Sept. 29, 2023.

Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives failed to pass a short-term spending measure Friday, increasing the chances of a government shutdown when funding runs out at 12 a.m. Sunday.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said Friday that passing a short-term funding deal was critical to maintaining security at the U.S.- Mexico border and would buy lawmakers crucial time to negotiate spending priorities, but the measure was defeated by the most conservative members of his Republican Party.

Writing on X, formerly known as Twitter, McCarthy later said another spending bill that originated in the Senate has no chance of winning House approval.

"After meeting with House Republicans this evening, it’s clear the misguided Senate bill has no path forward and is dead on arrival," he said.

A U.S. government shutdown is now looking inevitable for Sunday as lawmakers remain at odds over the size of the U.S. budget for the next 12 months, continued aid for Ukraine to fight Russia, immigration controls at the U.S.-Mexican border, and social welfare programs to help impoverished Americans.

Asked about the looming shutdown in an interview with the nonprofit news outlet ProPublica, President Joe Biden Friday cast blame on hard-line Republicans.

"There is a group of MAGA Republicans who genuinely want to have a fundamental change to the way the system works and that’s what worries me the most," Biden said in the excerpt released by ProPublica. The full interview is to be released Sunday.

U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., speaks with reporters as the deadline to avert a partial government shutdown approaches on Capitol Hill in Washington, Sept. 28, 2023.
U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., speaks with reporters as the deadline to avert a partial government shutdown approaches on Capitol Hill in Washington, Sept. 28, 2023.

Earlier, McCarthy put a short-term continuing resolution, known as a CR, up for a House vote, calling it "a stopgap measure that will fund the government and secure the border."

But the resolution was defeated by a vote of 232-198, with 21 Republicans joining a united Democratic opposition. Even if the measure were to pass the Republican-majority House, it would face little chance of passage in the Democratic-majority Senate.

House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said after Friday’s vote that the Republicans "tried a partisan continuing resolution and they failed."

"And," Jeffries said, "there was no way out of their Republican civil war. The only path forward is to partner with House Democrats in a bipartisan way. And we're prepared to do just that."

The Senate is working on a seven-week funding plan that would keep the government fully open through mid-November to give lawmakers more time to set spending levels through next September. The bi-partisan legislation allocates $6 billion in supplemental aid for the war in Ukraine and for disaster relief in the United States, two sticking points for conservatives in the House.

Government agencies Thursday morning began notifying workers a shutdown could be in the offing.

Office of Management and Budget Director Shalanda Young told White House reporters Friday a government shutdown could cost the U.S. economy $26 billion.

"The hope is though during a shutdown, if that happens, the economy would be able to pick that GDP loss up in the next quarter. So, it may not be a permanent loss, but why risk our economy for a manufactured shutdown? All a problem within one conference in Congress." she said.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell warned lawmakers earlier this week about the dire effects of shutting down part of the government, especially difficulties in controlling the influx of migrants at the country’s southern border with Mexico.

"Shutting down the government is not like pressing pause," McConnell said on the Senate floor Thursday. "It’s not an interlude that lets us pick up where we left off. It’s an actively harmful proposition. And instead of producing any meaningful policy outcomes, it would actually take the important progress being made on a number of key issues and drag it backward."

If a short-term funding deal cannot be reached, more than 4 million U.S. military service personnel and government workers would not be paid, although essential services, such as air traffic control and official border entry points would still be staffed. Pensioners might not get their monthly government payments in time to pay bills and buy groceries, and national parks could be closed.

FILE - President Joe Biden meets with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy to discuss the debt limit, in the Oval Office of the White House, in Washington, May 22, 2023.
FILE - President Joe Biden meets with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy to discuss the debt limit, in the Oval Office of the White House, in Washington, May 22, 2023.

Such shutdowns have occurred four times in the last decade in the U.S., but often have lasted just a day or two until lawmakers reach a compromise to fully restart government operations. However, one shutdown that occurred during the administration of former President Donald Trump lasted 35 days, as he unsuccessfully sought funding to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexican border.

"This does look very chaotic, but this is not the first time it's happened," Todd Belt, director of the school of political management at The George Washington University, told VOA. "There is a price that has to be paid here. But that is the price of democracy. It does seem very messy sometimes. But eventually, usually you get some compromise."

McCarthy reached a deal in May with Biden on spending levels for fiscal 2024, but a small faction of far-right House Republicans rejected the deal and now is demanding further spending cuts.

The McCarthy-Biden deal called for $1.59 trillion in discretionary spending in fiscal 2024, but some of the right-wing members of the House Freedom Caucus are demanding another $120 billion in cuts and further border controls.

The cuts would be a relatively small portion of the overall $6.4 trillion U.S. budget and would not affect pension payments or government-provided health insurance for older Americans.

The Senate’s short-term spending plan through mid-November could win passage in the House, but only with a mix of Republican and Democratic votes, jeopardizing McCarthy’s speakership.

"Many of these hard-right Republicans who are opposed to any sort of deal or bipartisanship are likely not going to get what they want, because they keep asking for more," Belt told VOA.

"Ultimately, I think that McCarthy is going to have to make a deal with House Democrats in order to pass these deals. And if he does that – and he did that once to get the spending limit set — when he did these initial negotiations, those Republicans were very angry with him. They'd be angry with him again."

Biden told a group of donors at a fundraiser in San Francisco on Wednesday, "I think that the speaker is making a choice between [retaining] the speakership and American interests."

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