Plus: Biden hits Johnson over Ukraine funding
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â [The Fisc]( Â Â By Yuval Rosenberg and Michael Rainey Happy Friday! Hereâs what you need to know ahead of next week. Johnson will be in the spotlight next week. (Reuters) Johnson Faces Dilemma as Shutdown Deadline Approaches
Congress will return to Washington next week with just days to go before the first of two deadlines to fund the government and keep agencies operating. As the March 1 and March 8 deadlines draw near, Republicans reportedly remain divided over their strategy for the spending bills â and a group of key House Democrats is reportedly warning Speaker Mike Johnson and the other congressional leaders to steer clear of the divisive âpoison pillâ policy riders that House Freedom Caucus conservatives have sought. âWe are extremely concerned that the House Republican Leadership continues to advocate for policy riders that have been shown time and time again to be unpopular with the American people and obstacles to completing the appropriations process,â 14 House Democrats wrote in a Friday [letter]( to congressional leaders. âClean funding bills â free of contentious poison pill riders that members of both parties oppose â represent the best path forward as we work to fulfill our duty to the American people to keep the federal government running.â The letter also called for keeping non-defense discretionary spending at the $773 billion level agreed to last month by Johnson and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer. The Democratsâ letter, first reported by [Axios]( comes after 28 House Freedom Caucus conservatives on Wednesday sent their own letter to Johnson seeking details on the status of the appropriations talks and more than 20 of their desired policy provisions, including ones related to abortion, guns, diversity initiatives and border security. The list includes a proposal to cut Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkasâ salary to $0 and another to defund organizations such as the World Health Organization and World Economic Forum. The conservativesâ letter warned that failing to eliminate funding for programs and personnel that Republicans oppose will reduce the probability that a majority of the GOP majority will support the appropriations bills. They added: âIf we are not going to secure significant policy changes or even keep spending below the caps adopted by bipartisan majorities less than one year ago, why would we proceed when we could instead pass a year-long funding resolution that would save Americans $100 billion in year one?â The year-long funding bill conservatives mentioned would trigger across-the-board 1% spending cuts under the terms of last yearâs Fiscal Responsibility Act, the bipartisan deal to raise the debt limit. But defense hawks oppose such sweeping cuts, adding to the GOP divisions over the funding plans. âA 1% cut to defense wonât fly. The current proposal didnât keep up with inflation as it is, and the military is decreasing the number of F-35s and attack submarines theyâre buying,â Republican Rep. Don Bacon of Nebraska told [Semafor](. All eyes on Johnson: After agreeing to a $1.66 trillion discretionary spending topline last month, Johnson must decide how he wants to approach this funding deadline, knowing that Democratic votes will be needed to enact any spending bill and avoid a shutdown. Will he push ahead with a bipartisan deal, even if it could mean a right-wing push to oust him? Will he press for conservative positions, even if means a politically damaging shutdown? Will he pursue a full-year stopgap as a fallback that conservatives would accept? âIâm worried. Of all the scares weâve had since the last fiscal year, I think this is going to be the scariest. I think we could be in a world of hurt,â one unnamed Senate GOP aide told [The Hill](. âI donât know if itâll be a partial or a full, but I think the chances of a shutdown are the highest weâve had this fiscal year.â Whatâs next: A spending deal could be announced by negotiators as soon as Sunday, with many on Capitol Hill expecting that another stopgap spending bill â the fourth for fiscal year 2024 â will still be needed to avert a shutdown and buy time for the annual appropriations bills to be passed. Biden Urges House Republicans to Take Up National Security Bill
President Joe Biden on Friday slammed House Republicans for sitting on a $95.3 billion national security bill passed by the Senate and called on them to deliver urgently needed aid to Ukraine. âLet me be clear: The House of Representatives must pass the bipartisan national security bill,â Biden told a meeting of state governors at the White House. âThe bill provides urgent funding for Ukraine and it passed overwhelmingly in the Senate and thereâs no question â none, none â if the speaker called for a vote in the House, it would pass easily today. Instead, they went on vacation.â Warning that âhistory is watching,â Biden noted that Russia is on the offensive in Ukraine once again, taking territory for the first time in months. âBut here in America, the speaker gave the House a two-week vacation,â Biden said. âThey have to come back. They have to come back and get this done. His failure to support Ukraine in this critical moment will never be forgotten in history. It will be measured, and it will have impact for decades to come.â Biden also called on Republicans to work with him to address the crisis on the border with Mexico. Biden said the immigration system at the border is underfunded and in need of repair. âOver time, our laws and our resources havenât kept up with our system and itâs broken,â he said. âAnd our politics has failed to fix it.â Biden called a bipartisan deal that was brokered in the Senate but rejected by Republicans the âstrongest border deal the country has ever seen.â He called on the governors to help him apply some political pressure to pass that deal, which includes money for states dealing with increased immigration. âIf this matters to you, matters to your state, tell your members of Congress that are standing in the way, show a little spine,â Biden said. âPass the bipartisan security bill, notwithstanding you may reap the wrath of one or more of your colleagues.â Quote of the Day
âWe have enough of committed people who are ready to put their lives in danger, but we canât just waste our lives â we also need some means of support.â â A 31-year-old Ukrainian reconnaissance drone operator named Denys, as quoted by [The Washington Post]( pleading with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer for more U.S. aid. Schumer and four other senators visited Ukraine to meet with military leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. They also sought to ramp up pressure on House Speaker Mike Johnson to take up a Senate-passed $95.3 billion package that would deliver assistance to Ukraine. âThe weight of history is on his shoulders,â Schumer told reporters of Johnson. Number of the Day: 50
The Department of Defense has opened more than 50 investigations into potential fraud related to the delivery of U.S. aid to Ukraine. Pentagon Inspector General Robert Storch told reporters Thursday that investigators are looking into cases involving âprocurement fraud, product substitution, theft, fraud or corruption, and diversion.â No allegations have been substantiated at this point, but âthat may well change in the future,â he said. Storchâs office has more than 200 people involved in the oversight of aid to Ukraine, including 28 investigators in Ukraine itself. Bloombergâs Anthony Capaccio [says]( the oversight effort, which includes personnel from the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development, is similar to the ones undertaken during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. --------------------------------------------------------------- Send your feedback to yrosenberg@thefiscaltimes.com. And please encourage your friends to [sign up here]( for their own copy of this newsletter.
--------------------------------------------------------------- Fiscal News Roundup - [Top House Democrats Warn Mike Johnson on Freedom Caucus Fight]( â Axios
- [GOP Shutdown Fears Grow: âWe Could Be in a World of Hurtâ]( â The Hill
- [In Ukraine, Schumer Challenges Speaker Johnson to âRise to the Occasionâ and Pass More US Aid]( â Associated Press
- [Frontline Ukrainian Commander Pleads With Senate Leader Schumer for Aid]( â Washington Post
- [Biden to Governors: Tell Lawmakers Opposing Border Deal to âShow a Little Spineâ]( â The Hill
- [Biden Tells Governors Heâs Eyeing Executive Action on Immigration, Seems âFrustratedâ With Lawyers]( â Associated Press
- [Biden Tries to Flip the Politics of Immigration]( â New York Times
- [Progressive Groups Preemptively Rip Biden Over Immigration Executive Actions]( â Politico
- [Biden Planning to Hit Food âShrinkflation,â Corporate Greed in SOTU]( â Politico
- [Bipartisan House Members Call for Appropriations Rider Blocking Biden Administration LNG Export Freeze]( â The Hill
- [Most Americans in New Survey Say US Should Defend NATO Allies]( â The Hill Views and Analysis - [Ukraine Is at a Critical Moment. Does the Speaker of the House See?]( â Washington Post Editorial Board
- [Never Mind the Ides of March, Beware All of March]( â Jason Dick, Roll Call
- [Biden Gave $90 Billion to Red America. The Thank-You Went to Spam]( â Dana Milbank, Washington Post
- [Bidenomics Is Still Working Very Well]( â Paul Krugman, New York Times
- [Boy, This Economy Is Hard to Read. Mea Culpa]( â Conor Sen, Bloomberg
- [To Stop an Omnibus, Republicans Must Embrace a Clean, Full-Year Continuing Resolution]( â Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL), The Hill
- [Opposition to Medicaid Expansion Thaws in an Unexpected Place: The Deep South]( â Daniel Chang and Andy Miller, Washington Post
- [Trump Has Finally Remade Republicans Into Putinâs Playthings]( â Jonathan Chait, New York
- [How Trump Turned Conservatives Against Helping Ukraine]( â Molly Ball, Wall Street Journal
- [US Productivity Is on the Upswing Again. Will AI Supercharge It?]( â Justin Fox, Bloomberg
- [Congress Must Put People First, Bring Transparency to Health Care]( â Lisa Hunter, The Hill
- [Pharmacists Can Prescribe Paxlovid. Why Arenât More Doing It?]( â Leana S. Wen, Washington Post Copyright © 2024 The Fiscal Times, All rights reserved.
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