国会有 5 天的时间避免停摆
Congress Has 5 Days To Avert A Shutdown

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/congress-has-5-days-avert-shutdown

国会正在与时间赛跑,距离防止美国政府从 11 月 18 日开始可能关闭仅剩五天时间。 尽管进行了多次尝试,国会仍未能为 2024 财年(20 财年)的全部 5 万亿美元预算提供全额资金。 按照传统,国会通常会通过一项内容广泛的“综合”法案,涵盖所有 12 项资金需求。 由于对这些综合法案缺乏接受,一些共和党人提议根据特定部门通过法案,而不是选择整体方案。 经过数月的辩论和谈判,众议院和参议院最近都批准了某些资金,但这两个机构之间存在显着差异。 现在,为了延长对特定部门分配的讨论,新任命的众议院共和党领袖迈克·约翰逊提出的“阶梯式”持续解决方案(CR)策略可能会被证明是有用的。 在这种情况下,国会可能会批准两项临时资助措施,分别有效期至 1 月 19 日和 2 月 2 日。 尽管它已被各利益相关者广泛接受,但对其有效性的担忧仍在不断出现。 在关闭即将到来的不确定时期,两党立法者无疑都希望确保基本服务的顺利运行,避免延误、失业和其他财务中断。 尽管如此,每年国会似乎几乎不可能在 10 月底之前提交最终的年度预算提案。 因此,联邦资助的最关键要素通常通过连续的 CR 来延长,直到批准个人资助计划取得实质性进展。 迄今为止取得的进展甚微,预计很快就会进行新一轮谈判和投票,以避免即将到来的经济不稳定。

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原文

Authored by Joseph Lord via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Lawmakers will return to Capitol Hill this week with only a few days to avert a government shutdown.

The U.S. Capitol Building in Washington on Oct. 16, 2023. (Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times)

Under current congressional funding authorizations, the government is set to go into a shutdown on Nov. 17. When lawmakers return to the Capitol on Nov. 13, they'll only have four days until this deadline.

Every year, Congress needs to pass appropriations for twelve different sectors of the federal government. Failure to do so before the funding deadline leads to a partial or complete government shutdown, during which only federal services deemed essential remain functioning. Most federal employees are furloughed during a shutdown, and nobody—including members of the military—receives pay during this period.

Historically, government funding has been dealt with through major, usually thousand-page packages dubbed "omnibus" bills, a collection of most or all required spending legislation in a single bill. But many Republicans found this status quo unacceptable and have demanded that Congress instead pass each of the twelve spending bills on their own, a process they say is more transparent but also one which makes it harder to pass funding. The initial deadline to fund the government was at the end of September.

However, in an act that cost him the speaker's gavel, then-House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) put a continuing resolution (CR) on the floor, a stopgap spending bill that keeps the government open. This bill, which kept the government funded for 45 more days, passed largely due to Democrats' support.

Just days later, on Oct. 3, Rep. Matt Gates (R-Fla.)—a longtime critic of Mr. McCarthy—put an ultimately successful measure on the floor to vacate Mr. McCarthy's speakership.

(Left) Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) departs from the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington on Sept. 29, 2023. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images), (Right) House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) speaks with members of the media following a meeting of the Republican House caucus in Washington, on Sept. 30, 2023. (Nathan Howard/Getty Images)

Since then, the House remained largely paralyzed as Republicans sought a new speaker they could agree on, going through three unsuccessful nominations before landing on Rep. Mike Johnson (R-La.) as their pick to lead the House.

When he was elected on Oct. 25, Mr. Johnson inherited a House with only a few weeks to pass funding, a herculean task for a speaker still learning the ropes of leadership.

In this context, Mr. Johnson has been candid that the House may need to pass another CR, though he's floated an untraditional idea on how to go about this.

Where Funding Stands

In order to fund the government, the House and Senate need to agree on the text of each of the twelve required spending bills.

So far, each chamber has passed some of the required spending bills.

The Republican-led House under Mr. McCarthy and Mr. Johnson has passed seven of the twelve required bills, including funding for the Pentagon, Energy and Water, the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of the Interior and environmental agencies, the legislative branch, military construction projects and the Department of Veteran's Affairs (VA), and the State Department and U.S. foreign operations.

Last week, House leadership was forced to pull two funding bills from the floor due to a lack of required votes, including funding for Financial Services and funding for the Department of Transportation and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

The Democrat-led Senate, meanwhile, has passed three appropriations bills in a single package, dubbed a "minibus." Senate-passed spending bills include funding for agriculture, military construction and VA, and the Department of Transportation and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

However, none of the House or Senate-passed bills have yet gone to conference, meaning that, so far, not a single bill has made it to President Joe Biden's desk.

And finding agreement between the two chambers on funding may be easier said than done. House Republicans hope to use the funding battle as a means of winning concessions on controversial issues from Democrats, and will likely demand at least some concessions that will be hard for Democrats to swallow in order to agree to a spending bill from the Senate.

Thus, Congress functionally remains at square one on funding the government a month and a half after the original deadline.

With so much to do, it's all but certain that Congress will need to pass a CR, or the government will go into a shutdown.

A 'Laddered' CR

Recognizing that much of his caucus will balk at a traditional "clean" CR, a stopgap bill that simply rolls over previous funding levels for a set amount of time, Mr. Johnson has instead proposed what he's dubbed a "laddered" CR.

Under his newly-introduced plan, Congress would pass two CRs: one extending some government funding until Jan. 19, and another extending funding until Feb. 2.

In contrast to a traditional CR, which extends all government funding in a single package, Mr. Johnson's laddered CR proposal would provide extensions for individual government sectors.

"This two-step continuing resolution is a necessary bill to place House Republicans in the best position to fight for conservative victories," Mr. Johnson said in a statement.

"The bill will stop the absurd holiday-season omnibus tradition of massive, loaded-up spending bills introduced right before the Christmas recess," he continued.

U.S. Speaker of the House Rep. Mike Johnson (R-LA) (R) speaks as House Majority Whip Rep. Tom Emmer (R-MN) (L) listens during a news briefing at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, on November 2, 2023. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Such a method for extending government funding will likely be more amenable to some conservatives, but would also still likely need the support of Democrats to pass.

Democrats and Republicans alike have indicated they'd support such a proposal, but don't necessarily consider it the best course of action.

Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-Fla.) demurred from predicting whether this would be the route Mr. Johnson took.

"That's a speaker's call," Mr. Diaz-Balart told The Epoch Times.

He indicated that he would support such a move, but said he didn't see the benefit to breaking up the CR that way.

"You know, if you ask me, does that ladder thing have any real benefits? I would probably argue that I don't see them," Mr. Diaz-Balart said.

He added, "I think 99 percent of the people here, Republicans, understand that shutdown is really, really damaging to the country, to our national security. It wastes an amazing amount of money. And it gives you no leverage, right. But so so and we needed short-term CR we'll see how we go on to handle that."

Rep. Mike Garcia (R-Calif.) agreed, telling reporters that, while he would support a laddered CR if it came to the floor, "I don't know if it's the wisest move."

Rep. Mike Garcia (R-Calif.) speaks with reporters in Washington, on Oct. 16, 2023. (Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times)

Likewise, Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) didn't comment on whether he thought Mr. Johnson would go with a laddered CR, but said that if he does, it should expire sometime early next year.

The real test for this plan will be in the Senate, where Democrats hold a thin majority. However, it seems from public comments that such a scheme could win the support of the upper chamber.

While he didn't seem super enthusiastic about the prospect, Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) during an appearance on "Meet the Press," said, "I'm willing to listen."

Still, he opined that Congress shouldn't be passing multiple CRs.

"That's no way to run a railroad," Mr. Murphy said.

"I don't like this 'laddered' CR, it looks gimmicky to me," he continued, but added that he was "open" to considering whatever the House sent over. "I don't like what the House is talking about, but I'm willing to listen."

Now that Mr. Johnson has committed to taking this approach, lawmakers can expect votes on the two stopgaps in the coming days.

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