As summer ends, budget battles and investigations await

Spread the love

While Labor Day marks the unofficial end of summer for many, it’s also the final day of Congress’ August recess, with lawmakers returning to Washington Tuesday to a series of budget and spending battles.

Earlier this summer, Congress passed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, a budget resolution creating a framework for advancing many of President Donald Trump’s policy priorities in the coming years. But a budget resolution is merely a kind of high-level fiscal roadmap designating top-line spending. Appropriations bills are what’s needed to provide funding to government agencies, but Congress often struggles to pass them by Sept. 30 – the end of the government’s fiscal year – and instead passes short-term stopgap bills to avert a government shutdown.

Of the 12 annual appropriations bills, the House passed its version of the defense and National Security, State, and Foreign Operations spending bills in July, while the Senate passed a minibus of spending bills for the Departments of Agriculture, Veterans Affairs, and Congress itself just before its August recess. Each chamber needs to pass its own version of each appropriations bill; the House and Senate versions will go to a conference committee that will work to reconcile the versions into a single, final bill that must be passed by both chambers before going to the president.

If Congress is unable to pass all of the appropriations bills by the end of September, it will likely pass a continuing resolution, which simply extends current funding levels for government agencies to give lawmakers more time to negotiate.

Last year, Congress was unable to pass a defense appropriations bill and instead, for the first time according to Breaking Defense, funded the Department of Defense entirely through a continuing resolution for a full year.

In addition, the Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018, or the “farm bill,” is set to expire on Sept. 30. The farm bill is a massive authorization bill that works similarly to the One Big Beautiful Bill in that it creates a kind of blueprint – but on a smaller scale, for its respective departments and agencies – of spending levels and policy objectives that appropriations bills are used to fulfill. Farm bills are intended to be passed every five years, but with Congress unable to find sufficient consensus to pass a new bill, it has instead extended 2018’s twice.

Amidst all of the budget negotiations, several high-profile congressional investigations remain ongoing.

Congress continues looking into the coverup of former President Joe Biden’s mental decline while he was in office; the “Russia, Russia, Russia hoax,” as Trump calls it, or allegations that Democrats fabricated and popularized a story that his campaign colluded with Russia to tilt the 2016 election; and whether files from the court cases of disgraced financier and sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein implicate Trump or others who deserve to be held accountable.

Members of the House Oversight Committee are set to meet with some of Epstein’s victims next week, according to Forbes. The Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., is also scheduled to testify before a Senate committee regarding the sudden termination of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director, as Politico reported.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

No progress on funding as Trump cuts programs amid shutdown

No progress on funding as Trump cuts programs amid shutdown

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square After a third week of making zero progress on a federal funding deal, lawmakers have headed home for the weekend with no hopes of ending...
Denver calls for return of federal funding for Planned Parenthood

Denver calls for return of federal funding for Planned Parenthood

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Denver has signed on to an amicus brief looking to protect federal funding for Planned Parenthood. The Mile High City joined more than a dozen...
NYC sues Trump over pullback of federal funds

NYC sues Trump over pullback of federal funds

By Chris WadeThe Center Square New York City is taking the Trump administration to court over a decision to claw back tens of millions of dollars in federal funding over...
Illinois quick hits: ICE ordered to wear body cameras; Fed's Beige Book released

Illinois quick hits: ICE ordered to wear body cameras; Fed’s Beige Book released

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square ICE ordered to wear body cameras A U.S. District Court judge in Chicago has ordered federal immigration enforcement officers to wear...
WATCH: GOP says Pritzker out of touch winning $1.4 million; veto session week 1 wraps

WATCH: GOP says Pritzker out of touch winning $1.4 million; veto session week 1 wraps

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square Editor Greg Bishop shares reaction from...
Pritzker sounds alarm on DOJ voter data request; conservatives call response paranoid

Pritzker sounds alarm on DOJ voter data request; conservatives call response paranoid

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The debate over Illinois’ voter rolls intensifies after the U.S. Department of Justice requests full voter...
Republicans more likely to say DOGE effective at cutting waste

Republicans more likely to say DOGE effective at cutting waste

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square Republicans view President Donald Trump's Department of Government Efficiency more favorably than Democrats and independents as the president's cost-cutting bureau enters a new era after...
CW8GAllStars

Braves Participate in 8th Grade All-Star game

Six members of the Casey-Westfield Braves Class of 2030 participated in the 3rd Annual WVYFL North vs. South 8th Grade All-Star game Sunday afternoon at Cooks Stadium on the campus...
WATCH: Trump administration seeks to make fertility, IVF treatments more affordable

WATCH: Trump administration seeks to make fertility, IVF treatments more affordable

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square The Trump administration has struck another deal with a big pharmaceutical player, this time in the fertility space. EMD Serono, a subsidiary of German pharmaceutical...
States say they get big return on anti-Trump litigation

States say they get big return on anti-Trump litigation

By Dave MasonThe Center Square Attorneys general in California and Arizona say their states are getting billions of dollars back in their many lawsuits over what they call the Trump...

WATCH: Braver Angels CEO: Political dialogue is still possible – even in deep-blue WA

By Carleen JohnsonThe Center Square A little more than a month after the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk in Orem, Utah, new Braver Angels CEO Maury Giles came to...
Des Moines school board chair ends U.S. Senate campaign amid superintendent controversy

Des Moines school board chair ends U.S. Senate campaign amid superintendent controversy

By Dan McCalebThe Center Square Des Moines, Iowa, school board chair Jackie Norris ended her campaign for U.S. Senate Thursday, citing her need to focus on the school system in...
Former national security advisor Bolton indicted by grand jury

Former national security advisor Bolton indicted by grand jury

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square President Donald Trump's former national security advisor John Bolton was indicted Thusday by a federal grand jury. A federal grand jury in the U.S. District...
Retail advocate: 'Empty storefronts' will result from Chicago mayor’s budget

Retail advocate: ‘Empty storefronts’ will result from Chicago mayor’s budget

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The mayor of Chicago is touting new taxes in his 2026 budget proposal, but business groups are...
Illinois quick hits: SNAP to cut Nov. 1 if shutdown continues; Guard-blocking order stays in place

Illinois quick hits: SNAP to cut Nov. 1 if shutdown continues; Guard-blocking order stays in place

By The Center SquareThe Center Square SNAP to cut Nov. 1 if shutdown continues If the federal government shutdown continues past Nov. 1, 1.9 million Illinoisans will lose food assistance....