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    Friday, May 24, 2024

    House passes bill to avert government shutdown, sends to Senate

    WASHINGTON — Congress moved toward a deal to keep the U.S. government open after the House passed a bipartisan short-term spending measure with hours to go before a disruptive federal funding lapse.

    The vote was 335-91, with 209 Democrats voting with 126 Republicans to support the measure.

    The bill now heads for a vote in the Senate, which could happen before — or soon after — the midnight deadline if no senators throw up procedural hurdles.

    The proposal from Speaker Kevin McCarthy would keep the U.S. government open until Nov. 17 and include $16 billion in disaster funding but not aid for Ukraine. Lawmakers in both parties who support the Ukraine funding said that could be handled separately.

    “There is growing hope that we may actually avoid a shutdown,” Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell.

    A White House official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the House-passed bill will keep the government open at higher levels than the Senate’s version, noting it includes disaster relief and necessary authorization for the Federal Aviation Administration, which expires Oct. 1.

    The White House, the official said, expects Ukraine aid to be handled in a separate bill.

    The Senate bill had strong bipartisan support before the latest House maneuver. But McConnell, one of the strongest advocates for Ukraine, said Republicans there would block a vote on their bill to let the House do its work. McCarthy has told Republicans that Ukraine can withstand 45 days without new U.S. aid.

    Hard-liner mutiny

    McCarthy defied hard-liners in his own party with his proposal, which the speaker’s allies rushed to fast-track using a procedure that relied heavily on Democratic votes.

    The bill threatens to provoke hard-liner Matt Gaetz, McCarthy’s most ardent detractor, to move to oust the speaker.

    The House adjourned until Monday, preventing Gaetz from offering a so-called motion to vacate immediately after the bill.

    “If somebody wants to remove me because I want to be the adult in the room, go ahead and try,” McCarthy told reporters earlier Saturday.

    The measure doesn’t include ultra-conservatives’ demands for deep spending cuts and border policies anathema to Democrats.

    “I want to keep government open while we finish our job to secure the border,” McCarthy told reporters after a closed-door GOP meeting that lasted an hour and a half.

    North Carolina Rep. Greg Murphy emerged from the meeting saying some Republicans have a “pathological” dislike of McCarthy.

    “They’re not willing to put that aside and do what’s best for the country,” Murphy said of the hard-liners. “It’s pretty selfish, to be honest.”

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