President Joe Biden signed a short-term funding bill passed by Congress, averting a government shutdown just ahead of a critical midnight deadline. The Senate approved the measure Saturday evening after the House abruptly reversed course earlier in the day and passed a bipartisan bill. The bill required support from two-thirds of House members to pass under an expedited process.
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s job could now be on the line. Hardline conservatives have threatened to oust him if he relied on Democratic votes to avert a shutdown. The stopgap bill will keep the government open through November 17 and includes natural disaster aid but not additional funding for Ukraine, due to objections from some conservatives. The Biden administration has warned that this could have serious consequences for the war in Ukraine.
A government shutdown was prevented after Congress passed the stopgap funding measure ahead of the critical midnight deadline in a whirlwind day on Capitol Hill. President Joe Biden signed the bill late Saturday night.
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy announced the stopgap proposal Saturday morning, a move that came after weeks of infighting among House Republicans and a failed effort to pass a GOP stopgap bill in the chamber. The bill passed the House with an overwhelmingly bipartisan vote and was then sent to the Senate. The final vote was 88 to 9.
The bill will keep the government open through November 17 and includes natural disaster aid but not additional funding for Ukraine or border security. The stopgap bill originally included funding for Ukraine to help Kyiv fight the full-scale invasion from Russia, but the funds were dropped after some conservatives raised objections during negotiations.
Democratic Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet briefly held up the vote on the bill after he objected over concerns about the lack of funding in it. Bipartisan members of Senate leadership released a joint statement committing to vote on further funding for Ukraine aid “in the coming weeks.” House Democratic leadership said in a statement that they expect McCarthy to bring a separate Ukraine aid bill to vote when the House returns.
The decision by McCarthy to put a bill on the floor that would win support from Democrats could put his speakership at risk as hardline conservatives continue to threaten a vote to oust him from the top House leadership post. McCarthy was defiant after the vote, daring his detractors to try to push him out as he argued he did what was needed to govern effectively.
Hardliners are expected to force a vote to remove McCarthy as speaker, just “not yet,” according to a Republican lawmaker. New York Rep. Jamaal Bowman pulled a fire alarm in a House office building on Saturday morning shortly before the House was scheduled to vote on the funding bill, which he said was an accident. “I was trying to get to a door. I thought the alarm would open the door, and I pulled the fire alarm to open the door by accident,” he told reporters.
House Administration Committee Chair Bryan Steil, who first revealed the incident, said “an investigation into why it was pulled is underway.” McCarthy said the House ethics committee should look into it, while GOP Rep. Lisa McClain told CNN that she was circulating a resolution to censure Bowman.
President Joe Biden signed a stopgap bill to avert a government shutdown tonight ahead of a critical midnight deadline when funding for federal agencies was set to run out, the White House said in a statement. The Senate passed the measure Saturday evening after the House abruptly reversed course earlier in the day and passed a bipartisan bill to extend government funding after days of uncertainty over whether a shutdown could be averted.
The legislation punts a potential shutdown until November 17. It includes natural disaster funding but not aid for Ukraine to help Kyiv fight against Russia’s full-scale invasion.
Some Republican presidential candidates spoke about the averted government shutdown in remarks made on the campaign trail. Nikki Haley criticized Congress, including Republicans, for allowing the US to get close to a government shutdown by not producing a budget on time and for including funding for pet projects in appropriations bills.
At the California Republican Party convention in Anaheim, California, on Saturday, entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy criticized the threat of government shutdown as an unproductive strategy that does not accomplish the goal of reducing government spending. He argued that more effective government spending cuts would come from his plan to reduce the size of the federal bureaucracy. Ramaswamy also cited zero-base budgeting as a potentially effective reform to reduce government spending.
Former Vice President Mike Pence said he’s going to continue to be a “strong voice” when asked by CNN about his brother’s vote against Ukraine aid and whether the issue has divided his family. GOP Rep. Greg Pence of Indiana, Pence’s brother who endorsed him for president, on Wednesday voted against a bill that would have provided Ukraine security assistance for fiscal year 2024.
The stopgap funding bill does not include any new aid for Ukraine. But bipartisan members of Senate leadership released a joint statement committing to vote on further funding for Ukraine aid “in the coming weeks.” He did not answer whether he has confidence in House Speaker Kevin McCarthy to unite the party around a spending bill.
Republican Oklahoma Sen. Markwayne Mullin has been spotted all over the Capitol in the last few days, including with his former House Republican colleagues at their conference meetings and on the floor. Mullin was a key player in conversations between the House and Senate GOP as they wrestled with how to avert a government shutdown, running back and forth between the two chambers.
“I’ve been blessed to have friends on both sides,” he told reporters. Mullin even caught himself referring to the House GOP as “we,” at one point on Saturday. “If we do it — if the House does it — I still talk like I was there,” he laughed. Mullin was in and out of the conference meeting Saturday morning where House Republicans considered several options for keeping the government open, and he attended the Senate GOP conference’s lunch afterward.
“I just happen to have good relationships with the speaker and some of the House members,” he told CNN. “And then with Sen. (John) Thune, I just thanked him for giving me the opportunity to do it, you know, just running back and forth, but it was good.” “And we all came together — in a bipartisan manner, that’s even better,” he added. Asked whether he would be taking on this role as a go-between for Republicans across the Capitol more often, Mullin joked, “Lord, I hope we don’t have a day like this.”
“I need to bring my gym shorts. We’ll have to bring (Pennsylvania Sen. John) Fetterman’s rule back so I can have the gym clothes to run back and forth,” referring to the controversy in the Capitol earlier in September when Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer decided to stop enforcing the Senate’s unwritten dress code, only to have a formal resolution requiring business attire passed a week later. While Mullin acknowledged that the short-term spending resolution may put Congress back in the same spot in mid-November, he was optimistic they had learned something from this experience.
Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin welcomed congressional passage of a stopgap bill to avert a government shutdown but called for more Ukraine funding in a statement on Saturday night. The short-term funding measure does not include new aid for Ukraine in its battle against Russia’s full-scale invasion.
House Democratic leadership said in a statement Saturday that they expect House Speaker Kevin McCarthy to bring a separate Ukraine aid bill to vote when the House returns. Bipartisan members of Senate leadership also released a joint statement committing to vote on further funding for Ukraine aid “in the coming weeks,” after Democratic Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet objected to the Senate’s consideration of the short-term spending bill over concerns about the lack of funding.
“We cannot under any circumstances allow American support for Ukraine to be interrupted,” President Joe Biden said in a statement Saturday night.
The US Senate passed a stopgap bill tonight to keep the government funded through November. The final vote was 88 to 9. Some of the senators who voted against the bill are now speaking out. Here’s what they’re saying: Tennessee Republican Bill Hagerty, Kansas Republican Roger Marshall, and Kentucky Republican Rand Paul. Paul added: “We cannot save Ukraine by dooming the U.S. economy. I’m grateful to all Members of Congress who stood with me, but the battle to fund our government isn’t over yet – the forever-war crowd will return.”
The stopgap bill that the House and the Senate passed is en route to the White House, per a source. President Joe Biden is expected to sign it as soon as it arrives.
Bipartisan members of Senate leadership released a joint statement committing to vote on further funding for Ukraine aid “in the coming weeks,” after Democratic Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet delayed the Senate’s consideration of the short-term spending bill over concerns about the funding. “In the coming weeks, we expect the Senate will work to ensure the U.S. government continues to provide critical and sustained security and economic support for Ukraine,” it says.
Earlier Saturday, Bennet told reporters a bipartisan statement was exactly what he had hoped to see when he objected on the stopgap bill to keep the government open due to its lack of Ukraine funding. “I think it’s really important for us to send a message that the dysfunction that we have — in terms of this immediate question about opening or closing the government — doesn’t reflect on our bipartisan commitment to make sure that the United States stays in this battle and that we continue to support the Ukrainian people in their fight,” he said.
When asked if he trusts the House, Bennet said, “We’re gonna have to work every day between now and the next votes we take to make sure that the American people understand how important this is and that Congress fulfills our obligation.” He said he is not aware of any timeline from leadership.
Following the release of the bipartisan statement, Bennet in a separate statement addressed the need for Senate leadership to reaffirm support for Ukraine. “I objected tonight to proceeding to the Continuing Resolution because it failed to provide additional money for Ukraine. Senate Leadership needed to reaffirm our bipartisan commitment to sustain funding for Ukraine. The Senate Leadership has released such a statement, and, as a result, I voted to keep the government open,” he said in the statement.
President Joe Biden praised bipartisan efforts to keep the government open tonight and funded through November but added that the last-minute scramble by House Republicans was a “manufactured crisis” that could have been avoided months ago. “Tonight, bipartisan majorities in the House and Senate voted to keep the government open, preventing an unnecessary crisis that would have inflicted needless pain on millions of hardworking Americans,” the president said in a statement Saturday night, marking the passage of the stopgap bill.
Source: CNN