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House narrowly passes six-month funding bill as shutdown deadline nears goodinves.com

WASHINGTON — The Republican-led House voted Tuesday to pass a six-month funding bill that would prevent a government shutdown at the end of the week, overcoming fierce Democratic objections.

The vote was 217-213, with all Republicans but Thomas Massie, of Kentucky, supporting the legislation. One Democrat, Jared Golden, of Maine, voted for it.

The measure now heads to the Senate, where its fate is uncertain. Republicans control 53 seats, and Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., has made clear he’s firmly against it. That means at least eight Democratic senators would have to support the bill to cross the Senate’s 60-vote threshold and send it to President Donald Trump’s desk. 

The government is set to run out of money late Friday.

Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., who shepherded the bill through the House, took a victory lap after the vote, saying that House Republicans “stood together” with one Democrat to keep the government’s lights on.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., “is the leader of the Democrats on that side and he must determine whether he wants to fund the government and do the responsible thing or he wants to shut the government down,” Johnson told reporters, “and I certainly hope that there are enough Democrats in the Senate who have a conscience, who will do the right thing by the American people and take care of business over there.”

Ahead of the vote, Senate Democrats criticized the partisan approach House Republicans took on the funding bill. But a significant number of them kept the door open to supporting it.

And after an unusually long, private Senate Democratic lunch meeting Tuesday, Schumer declined to say whether he’d block the bill — a sign that his members lack consensus on the path forward.

“We’re going to wait and see what the House does first,” Schumer told reporters.

The legislation is not a typical stopgap measure, known as a continuing resolution or CR, that extends funding at current levels. This spending bill includes a slight increase in military spending and a moderate $13 billion cut in domestic nondefense spending. It was crafted by GOP leaders, who took input from the White House and excluded Democrats from the process. House Democratic leaders strongly objected to the bill.

Ahead of the vote, House Republicans also approved a “rule” that would prohibit a vote in the first session of this Congress to terminate the “national emergency” Trump declared Feb. 1 to impose tariffs on U.S. imports from Canada, Mexico and China.

Over the past several days, Trump and his top aides called undecided Republicans, including Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., to urge them to back the funding bill, multiple sources familiar with the calls said. And before the vote Tuesday morning, Vice President JD Vance huddled with House Republicans at the Capitol to rally support for the bill.

Rep. Kat Cammack, of Florida, one of the Republicans who were on the fence Tuesday morning, voted for the bill after, she said, she visited the White House earlier in the day.

A positive sign for Johnson coming into Tuesday was that the far-right House Freedom Caucus, which is frequently a thorn in the side of leadership, had endorsed the stopgap bill.

“I’m 100% behind this continuing resolution,” the caucus chairman, Andy Harris, R-Md., said in a rare appearance at Johnson’s leadership news conference Tuesday morning. “This is not your grandfather’s continuing resolution. This is a different type of spending bill.”

Democratic leaders staunchly opposed the six-month funding patch, blasting Republicans for pushing a bill they had no part in shaping. Democrats also objected to how the bill was structured, saying it gave the Trump administration too much discretion in how to spend certain pots of money.

And Democrats have pushed for guardrails on Trump and billionaire adviser Elon Musk’s attempts to slash or freeze some federal spending.

“The House Republican spending bill is an attack on everyday Americans. It will cut health care, cut veterans benefits and cut nutritional assistance to children and families,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., said at a news conference with his leadership team after the vote. “It is unacceptable, and that is why there was a strong showing of opposition amongst House Democrats.”

It’s unclear what will now happen on the other side of the Capitol. Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., said before Tuesday’s House vote that he would vote for the GOP’s funding bill.

“I refuse to burn the village down and to claim to save it,” Fetterman said. “I probably won’t agree with many facets of that CR, but when the choice is about shutting the government down, I don’t want to be involved with that.”

Other Democrats said they were watching to see what happens in the House vote before they announce their positions.

“I’ve got to wait to see the impact it has on Arizona,” Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., said Tuesday.

Sen. Angus King, a Maine independent who caucuses with Democrats, said Tuesday he was concerned that the Trump administration might try to make a shutdown as painful as possible. He is also undecided on the bill.

“That’s one of the things we have to consider. We’re dealing with people, many of whom, I suspect, think a shutdown would be a good thing,” King said, “and they could prolong it and use it to expand the president’s power even beyond what they’re already considering. … This isn’t normal.”

Sen. Andy Kim, D-N.J., also kept his powder dry.

“I haven’t come out publicly at this point, just because I want to see what the House does,” he said, aligning with top Democratic appropriators who want a one-month extension to negotiate a new funding agreement. “I’m still hoping that there’s space for the 30-day extension,” he said.

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