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Budget deal sparks scramble to prevent shutdown | TheHill

posted onAugust 5, 2019
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Article snippet: Congress and MORE struck a two-year budget deal, but now comes the hard part: actually funding the government. With both the House and Senate out of town for the August recess, lawmakers will face a chaotic September. They’ll have three weeks to prevent a second shutdown in a year that is set to start Oct. 1 without congressional action. “I think you better hold on to your hat in September because it’s going to be a fast track,” said Sen. MORE (D-W.Va.), a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee. “Things are going to move.” Congress has to pass either 12 government funding bills or a continuing resolution (CR) that would give negotiators more time while extending funding at 2019 levels. The House has passed 10 out of the 12 bills already. But those bills will not pass the Senate in their current form because they are loaded up with “poison pill” riders — provisions Republicans oppose. The Senate, meanwhile, is at square one after leaving its appropriations process in limbo while the White House and Speaker MORE (D-Calif.) hashed out the two-year budget deal. The 12 appropriations bills, in their totality, equal hundreds if not thousands of pages for lawmakers, the White House and their staffs to haggle over. Each bill presents a whack-a-mole of potential political and policy roadblocks that could pop up and stall talks. The complexity all but guarantees a CR will be needed to fund at least part of the government past Oct. 1. The stopgap measure typically go... Link to the full article to read more

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