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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    House approves jam-packed $1.3 trillion spending bill, sends it to the Senate

    House approves jam-packed $1.3 trillion spending bill


    The House passed a $1.3 trillion spending bill on March 22 that would fund the government through September. (U.S. House of Representatives)

    By Mike DeBonis and Erica Werner March 22 at 10:34 AM Email the author

    The House on Thursday passed a sweeping $1.3 trillion spending bill that makes good on President Trump’s promises to increase military funding while blocking most of his proposed cuts to domestic programs and placing obstacles to his immigration agenda.


    The 2,232-page bill, which was released just before 8 p.m. Wednesday, would keep government agencies operating through September. Congressional leaders muscled the bill through the chamber, tossing aside rules to ensure careful deliberation of legislation to meet a Friday night government shutdown deadline.


    The bill includes dozens of miscellaneous provisions, ranging from crucial fixes to the recent GOP tax bill to a measure on employee tips to language codifying that minor-league baseball players are exempt from federal labor laws. The spending bill is widely expected to be the last major legislation that Congress will pass before the November midterm elections, which has increased pressure to jam the bill full of odds and ends.


    The bill passed on a 256-to-167 vote after leaders of both parties hailed the compromise. At the White House, Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney said Trump would sign the bill.


    House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) said it fulfilled Trump’s governing agenda, including by increasing military spending and funding a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.



    “This bill starts construction on the wall,” he told reporters. “It funds our war on opioids. It invests in infrastructure. It funds school safety and mental health. But what this bill is ultimately about, what we’ve fought for for so long, is finally giving our military the tools and the resources it needs to do the job.”

    House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) called the bill “a tremendous victory for the American people,” one that keeps domestic agencies robustly funded while turning away Trump’s push for more border wall and immigration enforcement money.


    “If you want to think you’re getting a wall, just think it and sign the bill,” she said.


    [Here’s what Congress is stuffing into its $1.3 trillion spending bill]


    But there were plenty of grumbles in all corners of Capitol Hill about the rapid process that has left lawmakers and aides poring through text to see exactly what the bill will do. House GOP leaders waived their own rules requiring any bill coming to the floor to be posted for at least three days, and none of the more than a dozen lawmakers surveyed Thursday said they had read the entire bill.


    “There’s no way humanly possible to read 2,232 pages,” said Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), who is opposed to the bill.

    “Sometimes they jam you, but they pretend to give you three days to read it. All the veneer is off now.”


    Even Democrats who planned to support the compromise railed about the speed of the bill’s consideration.
    “No matter what you think about the bill, this process is something we have to stand up and say is unacceptable,” Rep. Jim McGovern (R-Mass.) said on the House floor.

    House Rules Committee Chairman Pete Sessions (R-Tex.) acknowledged the circumstances were not ideal.


    “There was a good, hard work put into this, and the answer is we are going to move forward and take care of funding our military properly and the rest of the government,” he said. “I, like you, see the frailties in what we do, and they’re enormous and they’re gaping holes, but we had to do what we had to do.”


    Besides the looming deadline, one consideration prompting the quick vote, congressional aides said, was the Friday funeral for the late Rep. Louise M. Slaughter (D-N.Y.). Dozens of members are planning to fly to Rochester, N.Y., for the service.


    Other lawmakers are set to leave on official delegations abroad as soon as Friday, aides said, taking advantage of the two-week congressional break for Easter and Passover.


    Ahead of the vote,House leaders were confident that the compromise would gain enough bipartisan support to get the bill through the chamber on Thursday — much as a precursor budget agreement generated brief fury only to pass on a comfortable bipartisan vote in the pre-dawn hours.


    “The members know what is at stake,” House Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) said late Wednesday after leaving House meetings during which his whip team began counting votes for the bill. “We have to pay our troops and support our president.”


    Attention now turns to the Senate, where unanimous consent from all members would be needed to waive procedural rules and set up votes before the Friday midnight deadline.


    That means any one senator could delay the proceedings and force a brief shutdown, much as Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) did in February, when he held up consideration of the previous budget bill.


    Paul said Wednesday that he had not decided how he would handle the new bill, telling reporters that he would wait to read it first. But he made clear that he was unlikely to be pleased by its contents.


    “I think it is safe to say that there are many voices in the Senate, including many Republicans, who are not real happy about having a thousand-page bill crammed down our throat at the last minute without time to read it,” he said. “It’s a really terrible, rotten, no-good way to run your government.”


    On Thursday morning, Paul tweeted that it had taken more than two hours to print out the bill so he could review it.

    The bill’s release was delayed for two days as leaders haggled over provisions sprinkled throughout the bill.

    One hotly litigated matter concerned funding for the Gateway program, a major New York-area infrastructure project. At Trump’s behest, Republicans succeeded in eliminating some provisions favoring the $30 billion project, which includes building a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River. But project backers said it would still be eligible for hundreds of millions of dollars in taxpayer funds.


    [Trump wants Gateway tunnel project left unfunded, Chao tells House panel]


    The dickering played out for hours Wednesday, even after top congressional leaders left a morning meeting on a snowy Capitol Hill declaring that a deal was at hand.


    Democrats pressed particularly hard to block Trump’s requests to fund a new wall along the U.S.-Mexico border and to beef up immigration enforcement capacity.


    The bill includes $1.6 billion in funding for construction of a border wall, but that number is far short of the $25 billion in long-term funding that the administration sought. Democrats also won tight restrictions on how that money can be spent.


    Trump declared victory for his priorities in a tweet late Wednesday: “Got $1.6 Billion to start Wall on Southern Border, rest will be forthcoming. Most importantly, got $700 Billion to rebuild our Military, $716 Billion next year . . . most ever. Had to waste money on Dem giveaways in order to take care of military pay increase and new equipment.”


    One late-breaking deal involved gun laws. Democrats agreed to add bipartisan legislation to improve the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) for gun buyers, while Republicans agreed to add language making clear that federal funds can be spent on research into gun violence — clarifying a long-standing restriction that has been interpreted as preventing such research.


    The package also includes a fix for a provision in the new tax law that favored farmer-owned cooperatives over traditional agriculture corporations, threatening the viability of some corporations by shifting sales to cooperatives. In exchange for agreeing to the fix sought by Republicans and farm groups, Democrats won an increase in a low-income housing tax credit.


    Omitted was a health-care measure sought by GOP Sens. Susan Collins (Maine) and Lamar Alexander (Tenn.), which would have allowed states to establish high-risk pools to help cover costly insurance claims while restoring certain payments to insurers under the Affordable Care Act. Trump, who ended the “cost-sharing reduction” payments in the fall, supported the Collins-Alexander language. But Democrats opposed it because they claimed it included language expanding the existing prohibition on federal funding for abortions.
    While a Democratic push to win provisions protecting special counsel Robert S. Mueller III did not succeed, the bill does include hundreds of millions of dollars to combat potential interference from Russia or others in the November midterm elections. The federal Election Assistance Commission will receive $380 million to dole out to states to improve their election-related cybersecurity. And the FBI is set to receive $300 million in counterintelligence funding to combat Russian hacking.

    The legislation also incorporates the Taylor Force Act, named after an American who was killed by a Palestinian in 2016.

    The measure curtails certain economic assistance to the Palestinian Authority until it stops financially supporting convicted terrorists and their families.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/power...=.67a8d1115e85
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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    NO AMNESTY

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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    "The House vote was not divided along party lines: 145 Republicans and 111 Democrats voted yes while 90 Republicans and 77 Democrats voted no."
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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Speaking at the White House, Mick Mulvaney, the head of Office of Management and Budget, insisted Trump supported the bill.
    “Is the president going to sign the bill? The answer is yes,” Mulvaney told reporters.
    NO AMNESTY

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    Moderator Beezer's Avatar
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    What about the increase in Foreign Worker Visas???

    Every Foreign Worker Visa should PAY a 15% "privilege tax" to work in this country.

    That 15% goes into OUR Social Security and Medicare...they get none of it. Plus the Employer is off the hook by NOT paying the matching contributions! They RIP off this country and RIP off US workers.

    It is a privilege to come here, to work in this country, NOT a right!

    We want LESS Foreign Workers! American's First.

    We have thousands of Puerto Rican's coming here with NO jobs or housing, we have thousands of homeless! We have thousands of college graduates and high school graduates that need jobs and housing!
    ILLEGAL ALIENS HAVE "BROKEN" OUR IMMIGRATION SYSTEM

    DO NOT REWARD THEM - DEPORT THEM ALL

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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    MW
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    Quote Originally Posted by JohnDoe2 View Post
    Speaking at the White House, Mick Mulvaney, the head of Office of Management and Budget, insisted Trump supported the bill.
    “Is the president going to sign the bill? The answer is yes,” Mulvaney told reporters.
    Today it is being reported that Trump is threatening a veto of the bill because it doesn't contain border wall funding and a DACA amnesty. I doubt he'll actually veto the bill, but we'll see.

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

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  8. #8
    Super Moderator GeorgiaPeach's Avatar
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    Related:


    Trump threatens to veto omnibus spending bill over DACA and the border wall


    https://www.alipac.us/f9/trump-threa...r-wall-357032/
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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Trump to sign spending bill after earlier veto threat - POLITICO

    https://www.politico.com/.../trump-threatens-to-veto-13-trillion-spending-bill-raising-r...
    9 mins ago - President Donald Trump told congressional leaders on Friday that he would sign the $1.3 trillion spending bill, according to a source familiar with the conversation. Trump earlier in the day raised the threat of a government shutdown by saying he was considering vetoing the legislation.
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