House votes on funding bill

The House of Representatives on Wednesday night began its final vote on a short-term funding bill that would reopen federal agencies after the longest U.S. government shutdown in history.

The House earlier cleared a procedural hurdle required before the vote could begin on a short-term funding bill that would reopen the government until at least the end of January.

President Donald Trump has said he would sign the bill.

The procedural motion passed 213-to-209.

The vote came two days after the Senate passed the bill, after the Republican majority in that chamber reached a deal with eight members of the Democratic caucus to end a stalemate that led to the shutdown on Oct. 1.

Fourteen prior votes in the Senate failed to pass a Republican-backed House bill that would have funded the government until mid-November.

Most Democratic senators refused to vote for the bill because it did not extend enhanced tax credits for millions of Americans who purchase health insurance coverage on Affordable Care Act marketplaces.

Under the Senate deal, Republicans agreed to allow Democrats a vote in December on a bill of their choice to extend those boosted subsidies, which are due to expire at the end of that month.

Without those tax credits, millions of Americans will see sharp increases in the cost of their Obamacare insurance plans.

The Republican deal will reverse all shutdown-related layoffs of federal government employees and ensure that all federal workers will be paid their normal salaries that they would have received if the government had not shut down.

The package also funds the SNAP program, which helps feed 42 million Americans through food stamps.

The deal also includes provisions for a bipartisan budget process and prevents the White House from using continuing resolutions to fund the government.

CRs have been repeatedly used to avoid government shutdowns.

The deal was reached over the weekend after days of news headlines about delays in air travel as result of air traffic controllers not showing up for work during the shutdown, and about the Trump administration seeking first to completely end, and then to only partially fund food stamp benefits for 42 million people.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., during remarks on the House floor, said some people will see their monthly insurance premiums “double or even triple” because of the lack of protection for the added ACA subsidies and that “more than 2 million Americans are expected to lose their health plans next year because it is just too expensive.”

DeLauro said House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., “has shown no interest” in holding a vote on the ACA subsidies, despite Senate Republicans saying that was the plan.

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., said, “We never should have been here.”

“We tried as Republicans more than a month ago to prevent a government shutdown,” Scalise said. “We waited for 42 days where time and time again, Democrats, to appease their most radical base, voted to keep that government shut down.”

Scalise said “millions of Americans” have had to endure “pain and suffering” because Democrats refused to vote for a funding bill.

He accused Democrats of hypocrisy by seeking $200 billion in health spending that would benefit “illegals,” while “advocating to gut the $50 billion Rural Health Care Fund.

“It’s insanity,” Scalise said.

This is developing news. Check back for updates.

Source link

Latest

Paris book launch and booksigning of ready for dessert!

Pin5Share5 Shares I’ll be at AXS design, one of my...

Song Exploder – Clipse

“The Birds Don’t Sing” Clipse was formed in 1994 by...

NFL’s Report Card Grievance Confronts Labor Law Protections

Photo by Rich Graessle/PPI/Icon Sportswire via Getty ImagesIcon Sportswire...

Newsletter

spot_img

Don't miss

Paris book launch and booksigning of ready for dessert!

Pin5Share5 Shares I’ll be at AXS design, one of my...

Song Exploder – Clipse

“The Birds Don’t Sing” Clipse was formed in 1994 by...

NFL’s Report Card Grievance Confronts Labor Law Protections

Photo by Rich Graessle/PPI/Icon Sportswire via Getty ImagesIcon Sportswire...

Episode 574 – Josh Gondelman

Comedian Josh Gondelman (@joshgondelman) joins Andy and Matt to...
spot_imgspot_img

Paris book launch and booksigning of ready for dessert!

Pin5Share5 Shares I’ll be at AXS design, one of my favorite shops in Paris, celebrating the release of Ready for Dessert on Sept 30th from...

Song Exploder – Clipse

“The Birds Don’t Sing” Clipse was formed in 1994 by two brothers: Gene Thornton Jr, aka Malice, and his younger brother Terrence Thornton, aka Pusha...