On Tuesday night, the Senate voted 72-18 to advance a short-term funding bill so as to avoid a government shutdown which would begin on October 1, just days away. Such a bill puts the Senate on track to pass a continuing resolution (CR) later this week to send to the House, The Hill reported.
"The Senate legislation will fund the federal government until Nov. 17, the week before Thanksgiving, and provide approximately $6.15 billion in funding for Ukraine and $5.99 billion in disaster assistance," the report also mentioned. "The legislation will also temporarily extend the expiring authority of the Federal Aviation Administration."
There's also $1.6 billion for the Bilateral Economic Assistance Fund for Ukraine in here. Big challenge to the House
— Burgess Everett (asapburgessev on 🧵) (@burgessev) September 26, 2023
It's expected that spending bills will have a more difficult time passing in the Republican-controlled House, where House Freedom Caucus members have stressed the need for bills that secure the southern border. As CNN's Manu Raju posted shortly before the Senate vote, McCarthy is looking to get a border security package included.
In addition to concerns that there is "Seemingly nothing on border," as posted by POLITICO's Caitlin Emma, Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) raised concerns about members not having enough time to read the bill before voting. He voted against the bill, as he revealed over X.
Lee has reason to be concerned. "Senate leaders kept the details of the legislation secret until shortly before Tuesday’s vote as lawmakers wrestled behind the scenes over adding money for Ukraine," The Hill noted.
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The bill, if passed, would send an additional $6.15 billion to Ukraine—on top of the &113 billion already sent to that country—to be spent between now and November 17th, when Congress will likely try to appropriate a much larger sum for Ukraine.
— Mike Lee (@BasedMikeLee) September 26, 2023
Then just a few days before Christmas The Firm will release a 2,000+ page “omnibus,” leaving members with only a few hours to review that bill before voting on it. Members often vote for such bills, falling for this old trick, as they’re threatened with being kept in DC over…
— Mike Lee (@BasedMikeLee) September 26, 2023
When they give me a bill that I can’t meaningfully review—much less debate and amend—I vote “no,” and did so tonight.
— Mike Lee (@BasedMikeLee) September 26, 2023
"No CR" has been trending over X as users express their displeasure, including and especially as it pertains to funding for Ukraine.
As Leah reported earlier on Tuesday, polling from Morning Consult shows that Americans would be more likely to blame Democrats in Congress (21 percent) and President Joe Biden (23 percent) combined, than the 34 percent who would blame Republicans in Congress. Nevertheless, the White House has been fierce in putting the onus on House Republicans.
A statement from the White House referred to an "Extreme Republican Shutdown" and during Tuesday's press gaggle aboard Air Force One as well as Monday's press briefing, Jean-Pierre stuck to her narrative of a "Republican shutdown." In the process, though, she botched a quote from Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) about who would be to blame, as the official White House transcript shows.
A headline from Newsweek earlier on Tuesday also warned that "Joe Biden's Polling Woes Could Get Even Worse As Shutdown Looms."
Just over a third of voters (34%) say Republicans in Congress would be mostly to blame for a government shutdown, while 23% would blame President Joe Biden and 21% would blame Democrats in Congress. https://t.co/qSH0yBthxD pic.twitter.com/iCqhgOaodk
— Morning Consult (@MorningConsult) September 26, 2023
REPORTER: "A higher percentage of Americans would actually blame the shutdown on the president and the Democrats..."
— Townhall.com (@townhallcom) September 25, 2023
KJP: "This will be a Republican shutdown." pic.twitter.com/HWe9fyWRP3
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