House passes government funding patch, sending over to Senate
Right before recessing for the Rosh Hashanah holiday, U.S. House lawmakers passed Friday a short-term Continuing Resolution to postpone the Sept. 30 government shutdown deadline.
If passed by the Senate, the CR will freeze most federal funding at current levels for a period of seven weeks, giving lawmakers time to finish passing all 12 annual appropriations bills for fiscal year 2026.
It also includes $30 million for lawmaker security and $58 million for U.S. Supreme Court judges and members of the executive branch.
Rep. Jared Golden, D-Maine, was the only Democrat to vote for the bill, while only two Republicans – Reps. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., and Victoria Spartz, R-Ind., – voted no.
Nearly all Democrats opposed the bill because it did not include health care policy riders, such as an extension of the COVID-19 era expansion of Obamacare Premium Tax Credits.
“Democrats believe we must address this health crisis,” Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., told lawmakers prior to the vote. “This has to be addressed in the spending bill. Republicans’ spending bill does not address the health care crisis and for that reason, I am opposed.”
But House Appropriations Chairman Tom Cole, R-Okla., called Democrats’ opposition “political theater.”
“At the beginning of this process, I was asked to produce a clean bill for a limited period of time by my colleagues on the other side,” Cole said. “Then, all of a sudden, we have extraneous demands for things unrelated to the day-to-day operation of the government…You got exactly what you asked for.”
The bill now heads to the Senate for a vote.
Latest News Stories
FBI probes Michigan synagogue attack as targeted violence, antisemitism
Iran to see ‘highest volume of strikes’ yet on Friday
Illinois Quick Hits: One confirmed dead from Kankakee tornado
Four service members killed in KC-135 crash
U.S. military jet goes down over Iraq; incident not attributed to hostile fire
Casey-Westfield Explodes for 12 Runs in Third Inning, Downs Neoga 17-5
Pritzker: ‘God was looking out for people’ in storm-damaged Kankakee County
Illinois Quick Hits: Correctional officer charged with sexual misconduct
Costco faces lawsuit as consumers seek refunds from invalid tariffs
Insurer won’t back Gori defense vs asbestos lawsuit fraud claims
With teachers union support, committee approves charter school mandates
Allstate can’t delete class action over alleged secret app tracking
Chicago voters view housing affordability as bigger issue than crime
New Illinois gun bill aims at glock switches; critics say it misses the real problem