U.S. Budget Bills | Partial Shutdown ends, 10 days of DHS funding

  • Thread starter Thread starter nycfan
  • Start date Start date
  • Replies: 3K
  • Views: 109K
  • Politics 
The Senate voted 71 to 29 to pass the bipartisan spending deal to fund most of the government and keep the Department of Homeland Security running for two weeks while Democrats and President Trump negotiate restrictions on the administration’s immigration crackdown. It still must clear the House before it becomes law.
 

“… The agreement, the culmination of an intense round of haggling between the White House and Democrats, did not come together in time to avert a brief lapse in federal funding over the weekend, starting on Saturday morning.

… “I’ve never seen a political party take its best issue and turn it into its worst issue in the period of time that it has happened in the last few weeks,” Senator John Kennedy, Republican of Louisiana, told reporters before the vote on the deal on Friday night.

… With the House unable to pass it before Monday, funding for the Homeland Security Department and an array of others, including the Pentagon and health and transportation programs, was on track to lapse after midnight on Friday. The White House budget office directed affected agencies to carry out plans for an orderly shutdown.…”
 

House Approves Measure to End Partial Government Shutdown​

Trump signed the bill into law, setting the stage for immigration enforcement talks​


🎁 —> https://www.wsj.com/politics/policy...6?st=JkwgjF&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
“… The House voted 217-214 to fund a large portion of the government through the rest of the fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30. The Senate cleared the package last week. Trump, who urged lawmakers to back the deal, signed it into law, restoring funding for agencies that had lapsed Saturday.

… The legislation provides $1.2 trillion spread across five spending bills, including the Pentagon and the Health and Human Services Department. It splits off a sixth measure for the Department of Homeland Security, instead funding it through Feb. 13 at current levels. DHS was separated to allow lawmakers more time to negotiate over possible new restrictions on immigration agents demanded by Democrats….”
 
Back
Top