'Buckle up, turbulence ahead': US Congress has four days to fund govt

The Senate plan rejected by US House Speaker Kevin McCarthy would fund the government through Nov. 17. Instead, the House of Representatives is focusing its efforts on the 12 separate full-year funding bills.

Kevin McCarthy's House of Representatives is focusing its efforts on trying to agree on more of the 12 separate full-year funding bills, of which they have so far passed one, rather than approve a stopgap funding bill advancing in the US Senate. Photo: AP
AP

Kevin McCarthy's House of Representatives is focusing its efforts on trying to agree on more of the 12 separate full-year funding bills, of which they have so far passed one, rather than approve a stopgap funding bill advancing in the US Senate. Photo: AP

Republican US House Speaker Kevin McCarthy has rejected a stopgap funding bill advancing in the Senate, bringing Washington closer to its fourth partial shutdown of the US government in a decade with just four days to go.

That would lead to the furlough of hundreds of thousands of federal workers and the suspension of a wide range of government services, from economic data releases to nutrition benefits, until Congress manages to pass a funding bill that President Joe Biden, a Democrat, would sign into law.

The Senate plan, which advanced on a wide bipartisan margin on Tuesday, would fund the government through Nov. 17, giving lawmakers more time to agree on funding levels for the full fiscal year beginning Oct. 1.

McCarthy's House of Representatives was focusing its efforts on trying to agree on more of the 12 separate full-year funding bills, of which they have so far passed one.

"I don't see the support in the House" for the Senate plan, McCarthy said on Wednesday, though the bill has the support of Senate Republicans, including Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.

"The president should step in and do something about it; otherwise the government will shut down," McCarthy told reporters.

The House was expected to vote late into the night on amendments to specific funding bills, though even if all four of those bills were to be signed into law by Saturday, on their own they would not be enough to prevent a partial government shutdown.

Weeks ago, Biden urged Congress to pass a short-term extension of fiscal 2023 spending, along with emergency aid to help state and local governments cope with natural disasters and help Ukraine in its war against Russia. He also sought new border security funding.

The standoff has begun to attract the attention of ratings agencies, with both Moody's and Fitch warning it could damage the federal government's creditworthiness.

House Republicans want much tougher legislation that would stop the flow of immigrants at the US southern border with Mexico and deeper spending cuts than were enacted in June.

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Call for bipartisanship

Executive branch agencies were already making preparations for determining which federal workers would remain on the job –– without pay until the government is funded –– and which ones will be furloughed. Similar exercises were occurring in Congress as well, where thousands of legislative aides and other support workers are employed.

"Speaker McCarthy, the only way - the only way out of a shutdown is bipartisanship," Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a speech to the Senate.

The Senate bill also would appropriate about $6 billion for domestic disaster responses and another $6 billion in new aid to Ukraine. McCarthy is facing threats from hardline members of his own party who rejected a deal he negotiated with Biden in May for $1.59 trillion in discretionary spending in fiscal 2024 and approved in June, demanding instead another $120 billion in cuts.

A handful of the hardliners have also threatened to oust McCarthy from his leadership role if he passes a spending bill that requires any Democratic votes to pass.

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'Turbulence ahead'

McCarthy said House Republicans would probably bring their own stopgap measure to the floor on Friday.

It was unclear whether there will be the votes in the House to win passage of it, however.

The standoff comes four months after Washington flirted with defaulting on the nation's more than $31 trillion in debt, a move that would have rocked financial markets worldwide.

Another downgrade of the US credit rating could push borrowing costs - and the nation's debt - even higher.

Hardline Republicans, including Donald Trump, frontrunner for the party's 2024 presidential nomination, have dismissed the risks of a shutdown and in some cases actively pushed for one.

"My advice is buckle up –– there's turbulence ahead," Representative Andy Ogles told reporters after attending a closed-door meeting of fellow Republicans.

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