House Republicans released on Sept. 16 a bill to fund the government through Nov. 21.
The deadline to fund the government is Oct. 1, as the end of the fiscal year is Sept. 30.
Three House Republicans already announced their opposition to the bill before it was released.
House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) cannot afford to lose more than two Republicans on party-line votes.
He said he is likely to support the rule for debating the short-term funding bill “unless it has something funky in it.”
Rep. Victoria Spartz (R-Ind.) said she is a “no” on the measure, citing the timing.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) said the bill would fund the government at levels under the previous administration. A continuing resolution (CR) funds the government at current levels past Sept. 30.
“Democrats currently are playing games with this government funding idea; they’re trying to bring in extraneous issues. We’ve been working towards getting the government funding appropriations bills done in the House,” he said.
“Our Appropriations Committee worked, by the way, in bipartisan fashion, to get all 12 appropriations bills through the committee,” he said.
“We’ve gotten three of them passed off the House floor, and now we’ve voted just last week to go into a conference committee with the Senate to begin grinding this out. That’s how the process is supposed to work.”
Johnson said he is not looking for a government shutdown and that there might need to be a continuing resolution.
“So, if there’s anyone any Democrats who are trying to suggest that they want to shut the government down, we’re going to do everything possible to prevent that from happening. It does not behoove the country,” he said.
“And we may need a short gap funding measure, a CR for a short period of time, to allow the negotiations to continue,” he continued. “But it will be clean in its scope. And I surely hope the Democrats will not try to make this a big partisan fight.”
Johnson also said that additional funding for security for members of Congress will be in the bill.
Democrats have said they will not support a GOP party-line continuing resolution.
Schumer accused Republicans of wanting to “go at it alone.”
“And so if what we see next month is simply a continuation of that reckless right-wing Republican approach, we won’t be down with it next month either.”
President Donald Trump has called for passing the continuing resolution.
“In times like these, Republicans have to stick TOGETHER to fight back against the Radical Left Democrat demands, and vote ‘YES!’ on both Votes needed to pass a Clean CR this week out of the House of Representatives.”







