The question isn't "is the government going to shut down" but instead "How can the government NOT shut down".
BEGIN QUOTE FROM:
Congress has 2
weeks to fund the
government. They
have 3 working days.
weeks to fund the
government. They
have 3 working days.
Vox
3 hours ago
Latest Looming
Shutdown Could
Scuttle House
Democratic Retreat
Shutdown Could
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Democratic Retreat
Roll Call
1 day ago
Shutdown II
looming? Look at
the bright side!
looming? Look at
the bright side!
FederalNewsRadio.com
1 day
Congress has 2 weeks to fund the government. They have 3 working days.
Still without a deal on DACA and spending, Congress has two jam-packed weeks — of retreats.
By
Tara Golshan
Congress only has three working days between today and
the next shutdown deadline on February 8 — when Senate Democrats hope to
reach an agreement on immigration — to cobble together a spending deal
to keep the government open.
Congressional Republicans and Democrats will spend the
greater part of the next two weeks out of Washington on retreat: the
annual meetings that give parties time to strategize their legislative
priorities for the year ahead.
Republicans are heading off to Greenbrier resort in West Virginia today for three days. Next week, Democrats are scheduled to be in Cambridge, Maryland, for three days starting February 7, in direct conflict with the spending deadline.
Because members say they need at least a month to write a
spending bill, Congress is expected to pass yet another short-term
spending agreement on February 8 — but they still have a lot of
difficult decisions to make. There is still uncertainty around whether
that agreement will come with a deal on budget caps — the upper spending
limit for military and domestic programs — which Democrats and
Republicans have to agree on. And there’s already some frustration among
Democratic and Republican ranks about having to vote for another
short-term spending bill.
Democrats have already made peace with the likelihood of
cutting their retreat short, particularly because the future of the
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which the Trump
administration has promised to fully end by March 5, hangs in the
balance.
Democrats agreed to vote to reopen the government after a
three-day shutdown last week with the assurance of good-faith
immigration negotiations in the interim, and a promise from Senate Mitch McConnell to hold an open-floor debate on immigration after February 8 if a bipartisan agreement is not reached.
With
only four days with both party’s legislators in the building, Sen. Dick
Durbin (D-IL), the lead Democratic negotiator on immigration and the
Senate minority whip, said he “hopes” meetings will continue on DACA
this week and next.
“But,” he said, “let’s be honest: retreats.”
Congress doesn’t appear any closer to an actual deal on immigration
Last week, Congress only bought itself a little more
time. The idea was they would cobble together a deal on immigration and
more permanent government spending in the weeks ahead — but the actual
legislative calendar shrank that window for negotiation even more.
And it doesn’t look like there’s been much tangible progress in negotiations.
Last week, Trump’s administration briefed Republican
congressional aides with an immigration proposal that called for a path
to citizenship for 1.8 million undocumented immigrants who came to the
country as children, $25 billion to fund a southern border wall,
substantial curtailing of family immigration, and elimination of the
diversity visa lottery program, which would gut the legal immigration system.
The proposal was largely interpreted as a White House alternative to the one bipartisan proposal by Durbin and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) on immigration that Trump has already shot down.
Both Republican leaders in the House and Senate supported
the clarity offered by the White House proposal but made no commitments
to the actual policy. By Tuesday, House Republicans were still
discussing the partisan immigration proposal by Rep. Bob Goodlatte
(R-VA), which is unlikely to garner any Democratic support. And already
some Republicans in the Senate have expressed concern with the proposal’s serious cuts to legal immigration.
The shutdown also brought together a larger group of
bipartisan negotiators — roughly 30 senators who’ve named themselves the
“Common Sense Coalition,” who are intent on moving immigration talks
forward. Meanwhile, a team of Democratic and Republican leadership
deputies that have been dubbed the “No. 2s,” consisting of Durbin again,
as well as Minority Whip Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-MD), Majority Whip Sen.
John Cornyn (R-TX), and Majority Leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), have
also been negotiating.
In short, the state of immigration negotiations in Congress remains decentralized and disjointed.
For weeks conservative hardliners have commandeered
immigration negotiations. To win enough House Republican votes for the
short-term spending bill last week, House Speaker Paul Ryan promised the
Freedom Caucus, the lower chamber’s group of ultraconservatives, that
Republican leadership would whip votes for a conservative Goodlatte
immigration bill. Conservatives continue to say there is a path to
compromise, but they have shown no willingness to work with Democrats
thus far.
On Tuesday, Durbin said lawmakers weren’t any closer to reaching an immigration deal than they were a week ago.
The underlying spending fight is still up in the air
On top of immigration, Congress still has to strike a permanent spending deal for 2018.
So far, the parties still haven’t agreed on new budget
caps. Durbin told reporters that Democrats and Republicans were far
apart on spending caps negotiations. Without budget caps, any massive
spending bill risks triggering a sequester — across-the-board cuts to
domestic and military spending.
Republicans need Democratic votes to raise the budget caps on military spending and domestic programs.
It all goes back to 2011 when an Obama-era impasse over
the debt ceiling brought the American economy to near calamity. The
ultimate result was the 2013 sequester, which set into law
across-the-board budget cuts and established caps that would amount to
$1.2 trillion in cuts over the next 10 years.
Since the sequester, there have been two bipartisan deals
to raise the caps by billions of dollars. The first in 2013 was forged
between Rep. Paul Ryan and Sen. Patty Murray; a second was agreed on in 2015. There’s no question that Trump wants Congress to do that again.
Last year, Trump’s budget called for $603 billion in
defense funding, and both the Senate and House separately proposed even
higher figures.
Congress has repeatedly voted to raise the budget caps
and give sequester relief, but those adjustments, which extended through
fiscal year 2017, have now expired. In 2018, the sequester budget caps
max out defense spending at $549 billion and non-defense discretionary
funding at $516 billion, far less than what both Republicans and
Democrats would like to spend.
Democrats have established a guiding principle in
spending cap negotiations: If Republicans want more funding for defense,
then Democrats want a one-for-one increase in non-defense funding. This
time, however, that agreement hit a snag.
Reaching a budget cap deal is a high priority for defense
hawks in Congress, who say short-term spending deals hobble the
military — preventing them from being able to adequately plan resources.
Republicans in the House are trying to move forward a defense spending
bill without addressing domestic spending, which is a “nonstarter” for
most Democrats.
Because appropriators need these topline numbers to begin
putting together a trillion-dollar spending bill that would fund the
government through next September, the lack of compromise has put more
permanent spending bills on hold.
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Congress has 2 weeks to fund the government. They have 3 working ...
https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/.../congress-government-shutdown-calendar
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