Bangkok Post

Biden signs bill to avert shutdown

Federal agencies to run until September

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WASHINGTON: US President Joe Biden on Saturday signed into law a long-awaited funding bill passed by Congress, keeping federal agencies running through September and averting a damaging partial government shutdown.

“The bipartisan funding bill I just signed keeps the government open, invests in the American people, and strengthen­s our economy and national security,” Mr Biden said in a statement.

Senators missed a midnight deadline to pass the US$1.2 trillion (44 trillion baht) package to keep the lights on in several key government agencies but voted in the early hours to pass a resolution that had already advanced from the House.

At the same time, Mr Biden called on lawmakers to approve additional national and border security funding.

“Congress’s work isn’t finished. The House must pass the bipartisan national security supplement­al to advance our national security interests,” Mr Biden’s statement said.

“And Congress must pass the bipartisan border security agreement — the toughest and fairest reforms in decades.”

“It’s time to get this done.”

RACE AGAINST THE CLOCK

A day of high-stakes Capitol Hill drama began at midday last Friday, when the House of Representa­tives passed a $1.2 trillion, six-bill package representi­ng the largest and most contentiou­s section of federal funding.

With cash running out at midnight for three-quarters of the government, including defence and homeland security, the Senate was thrust into a race against the clock to advance the legislatio­n to Biden’s desk.

Budget negotiatio­ns looked close to breaking down, with both sides pushing to tweak the legislatio­n to reflect their campaign messaging and priorities ahead of November’s presidenti­al election, when Mr Biden faces former president Donald Trump.

Senators were preparing to adjourn with no deal on holding a vote, which would have prompted the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to begin scaling back operations in key federal agencies on Saturday morning.

But a deal came together just as the midnight deadline arrived, and the Senate voted to pass the resolution after 2am local time in Washington.

“It wasn’t easy, but tonight our persistenc­e has been worth it,” Democratic Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said on the Senate floor after hours of tense negotiatio­n.

“It is good for the American people that we have reached a bipartisan agreement to finish the job,” he added before the bill received final approval.

Republican Senator Mitt Romney said while the bill was “far from perfect, I voted for this appropriat­ions bill because it provides critical funding for our military and for border security.”

SPEAKER UNDER PRESSURE

Hours earlier, Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson had angered his own right flank by relying on Democratic votes to advance the package to the Senate.

Marjorie Taylor Greene, a close ally of Mr Trump, told reporters she had filed a “motion to vacate” the speaker’s chair over Mr Johnson’s endorsemen­t of the funding package, thrashed out over weeks of tense negotiatio­ns between the parties.

The resolution, a rare manoeuvre that requires a simple majority to pass, comes after the same maneuver led to the removal of previous speaker Kevin McCarthy last fall — and weeks of infighting as Republican­s rejected several potential replacemen­ts before settling on Mr Johnson.

The timeline for the next steps on Ms Greene’s resolution was not immediatel­y clear.

Nonetheles­s, a vote to remove Mr Johnson cannot take place until April at the earliest, with the House now on a two-week recess.

Ms Greene also told CNN that “quite a few” Republican­s were supporting her effort.

The shutdown would have affected about 70% of government agencies and department­s, as funding for the first 30% — covering agricultur­e, science, veterans programmes, transport and housing — passed without major drama last month.

Five of the six bills covering the rest of federal spending were also straightfo­rward, but disputes over the funding of homeland security delayed the release of the deal, originally expected last weekend.

Republican hard-liners were angered by a lack of stricter border security provisions in the package, as well as the overall price tag and the elevated speed with which the deal has been negotiated.

 ?? NYT ?? The US Capitol in Washington, last Friday.
NYT The US Capitol in Washington, last Friday.
 ?? ?? Biden: Congress’s work not finished
Biden: Congress’s work not finished

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