Congress

Capitol agenda: Republicans to reveal funding bill, testing Democrats in shutdown showdown

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Republicans are getting ready to reveal a short-term bill to fund the government through Nov. 20, despite Democrats’ demands for buy-in in any legislation to avert a shutdown.

Text of the continuing resolution is expected to be released as early as Monday morning, according to three Republicans. Here’s the latest:

The timeline: House Republicans want to put the CR on the floor this week. That still likely won’t give the Senate enough time to schedule a vote before next week’s recess in observance of Rosh Hashanah, however, leaving Congress with just days left to act before the Sept. 30 deadline.

The holdup: House Republican leaders are working to attach increased lawmaker security funding to the stopgap bill in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination. Speaker Mike Johnson told Fox on Sunday morning that all options are on the table, and three people tell Meredith it’s the final piece to resolve. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) has also been doing some last-minute lobbying for his bipartisan Russia sanctions bill to hitch a ride on the CR. But two people granted anonymity to discuss the views of GOP leadership say it’s not going in without President Donald Trump’s explicit and public backing.

The big problem: Democrats in both chambers insist they will not accept any funding agreement without bipartisan talks, and Republicans are going it alone. They also say they need the CR to include an extension of enhanced tax credits for Affordable Care Act insurance premiums, which are due to expire at the end of the year. Republicans are still figuring out how to proceed on that one.

A key question is how Democrats will vote in the Senate, where Republicans won’t be able to move government funding legislation without support across the aisle. Many Republicans are banking on a do-over of what happened in March, when Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer shored up support for a procedural vote on a shutdown-averting package negotiated only among the GOP.

But Schumer got an earful from his party’s base about not fighting harder for a better deal, and he’s currently warning his GOP colleagues that a CR without the ACA credit extension is a deal-breaker.

“If Republicans follow Donald Trump’s orders to not even bother dealing with Democrats they will be single handedly putting our country on the path toward a shutdown,” said a Schumer spokesperson Sunday night.

Some Senate Democrats have suggested they could support a “clean” stopgap funding bill now if it’s intended to buy more time toward negotiating an ACA subsidies extension later. But many of them are holding back on opining without first knowing what Republicans are officially offering.

“I’m not going to comment until I see what actually happens. It’s all speculation right now,” Sen. Gary Peters (D-Mich.) told Blue Light News.

What else we’re watching:   

— Senate rules change: This week Majority Leader John Thune will steer Senate Republicans toward finalizing their rules change to allow most executive branch nominees to be confirmed in batches. It will put Republicans on track to confirm their first tranche of 48 nominees including Kimberly Guilfoyle and Callista Gingrich to be ambassadors to Greece and Switzerland, respectively.

— DC bills get House vote: It’s shaping up to be a major week for the District of Columbia on Capitol Hill. A slate of bills will come to the House floor that would override laws put in place by the D.C. government, and the capital city’s top three leaders will appear before a key committee. This comes after Trump’s month-long federal takeover of D.C.’s police department and as the National Guard continues to patrol the city’s streets. Republicans remain intent on casting Washington as an example of a Democratic-led jurisdiction overrun by violent crime.

— Miran confirmation: The Senate is poised to confirm Stephen Miran Monday evening to the Federal Reserve, just around a month after the Trump ally was first nominated. The chamber has moved at blinding speed to install Miran so he can be in seat when the Fed kicks off its September meeting Tuesday, at which time the central bank is widely expected to cut interest rates.

Meredith Lee Hill, Jordain Carney and Hailey Fuchs contributed to this report. 

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