Short-Term Spending Bill Meets More Resistance

Opposition to a short-term spending bill climbed in both parties Thursday, forcing GOP leaders to ratchet up the pressure on fellow Republicans in an effort to avoid a government shutdown this weekend.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell encouraged Republican lawmakers in a private email Thursday to stick together and vote for the spending bill, a Senate GOP aide said Thursday.

Still, Republicans seemed to be bracing for a collapse in talks. "The leader has signaled that we ought to have flexible plans and prepare in case we lose the vote," said Sen. Roger Wicker (R., Miss.).

The House is expected to vote late Thursday on a spending bill that would keep the government funded through Feb. 16. Thursday morning, House GOP leaders didn't yet have enough votes to pass the one-month spending bill, and Democrats were expected to force GOP leaders to come up with sufficient support on their own.

"They still don't have the votes here," said Rep. Mark Meadows (R., N.C.), chairman of the House Freedom Caucus, a group of roughly three-dozen House conservatives, many of whom have balked at the short-term spending bill. Mr. Meadows and Rep. Jim Jordan (R., Ohio) said they had proposed several options to GOP leaders that would boost elements of military spending but that their request had been denied.

House Speaker Paul Ryan (R., Wis.) projected confidence Thursday morning that the House would be able to pass the stopgap bill, but he didn't explicitly say he had sufficient GOP support.

"We're making really good progress with our members," he said, predicting they would back the bill when the only alternative was a shutdown.

Mr. Meadows said he wouldn't buckle under pressure from GOP leaders.

"I don't get squeezed. I squeeze others," he said.

President Donald Trump, speaking to reporters at the Pentagon ahead of a meeting with senior military leadership there, said of a government shutdown: "It could happen."

He added: "If the government shuts down...the worst thing is what happens to our military." He also said: "We need this now almost more than any time in the past."

With a shutdown looming, Democrats have been trying to use their leverage to reach an immigration agreement. The government's current funding expires at 12:01 a.m. Saturday.

Even if the bill gets through the House, it faces a potentially larger hurdle in the Senate, where lawmakers from both parties declared their opposition in growing numbers Thursday.

Democratic senators who voted to keep the government open in December with a short-term spending bill are opposing the House stopgap measure. Virginia Sens. Mark Warner and Tim Kaine, who represent a high number of federal employees whose jobs could be disrupted if the government partially shuts down, voiced opposition on Thursday.

"We oppose the House Continuing Resolution, which punts budget discussions until mid-February," Messrs. Kaine and Warner said in a joint statement. "Congress should remain in session with no recess until we work out a long-term bipartisan budget deal that addresses all issues. We will support a short-term CR for a few days to keep the government open while we stay in town and conclude our negotiations."

Spending bills need 60 votes to pass the Senate, where Republicans hold 51 seats. At least three GOP senators have said they would oppose the short-term spending bill: Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Mike Rounds of South Dakota and Rand Paul of Kentucky. Sen. John McCain (R., Ariz.) is absent due to brain cancer, so GOP leaders would need at least 13 Democratic votes.

Republican Sen. Mike Lee of Utah voted against the last continuing resolution and generally opposes stopgap measures. He has declined to voice his support for this bill, which may mean GOP leaders would need even more Democratic support.

Mr. Rounds is holding out for an agreement with more money and certainty for the military. He wants a shorter-term spending measure to see a vote on a bipartisan bill released Wednesday from Sens. Lindsey Graham (R., S.C.) and Dick Durbin (D., Ill.), saying it seemed like the best path to a bipartisan immigration deal.

Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn (R., Texas) rejected the idea of a very short-term spending bill lasting a day or two. "No, we're not doing that, " he said. However, other senior Republicans said it could become a Plan B.

The moment shows how many in the Republican conference have reached their limits of tolerance for short-term spending bills. Congressional leaders, unable to resolve differences over a diverse array of policy fights that are tied to spending, have already passed three interim funding bills this fiscal year.

"It just seems to me that we've had way too much of this, it doesn't come to an end, and we need to force ourselves to do what would be good for the country," Sen. Jerry Moran (R., Kan.) said Thursday. He declined to say whether he would vote against a temporary spending bill if one passes the House later Thursday. He said he'd prefer a shorter-term spending bill to keep Congress in over the weekend to reach broader deals on spending levels, disaster relief for areas hit by hurricanes, and immigration policy.

--Siobhan Hughes contributed to this article.

Write to Natalie Andrews at Natalie.Andrews@wsj.com and Kristina Peterson at kristina.peterson@wsj.com

WASHINGTON -- The threat of a partial government shutdown intensified Thursday as Senate Democrats indicated they had the votes to block a short-term spending bill, according to multiple congressional aides, and GOP leaders pressured recalcitrant lawmakers to resist joining an effort to change the measure.

The House was expected to pass on Thursday evening a spending bill that would keep the government funded through Feb. 16. Though Republicans control more than enough votes to pass the bill without Democratic support, House GOP leaders on Thursday had to wrangle support out of the party's conference for the short-term bill.

The prospects for passage of the spending measure in the House improved after final negotiations late Thursday. Rep. Mark Meadows (R., N.C.), chairman of the hard-line Freedom Caucus, said he had reached a deal with House Speaker Paul Ryan to later vote on "provisions that have to do with our military readiness" that Mr. Meadows said would enable many in his group to support the one-month bill.

The bill needs 216 votes to pass, assuming all lawmakers are present and voting; there are 238 Republicans and 193 Democrats in the House.

Meanwhile, in the Senate, where lawmakers from both parties declared their opposition in growing numbers Thursday, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell encouraged Republicans in a private email and at a closed-door lunch Thursday to stick together and vote for the spending bill, GOP aides and lawmakers said.

Congressional leaders, unable to resolve differences over an array of policy fights that are tied to spending, have passed three interim funding bills this fiscal year, including two in December. Now, some members of both parties are growing weary of such short-term bills, for varying reasons.

Republican defense hawks want a deal that raises spending caps on the Pentagon. On the Democratic side, lawmakers say they want more stability in programs such as the Children's Health Insurance Program and more money for areas affected by natural disasters, and also hope to capitalize on leverage to get a broader immigration deal.

The upshot is that while stopgap measures have helped lawmakers kick tougher fights down the road, more and more lawmakers seem ready to engage in the battle.

Mr. Meadows, of the Freedom Caucus, said earlier that he wouldn't buckle under pressure from GOP leaders to go along with the short-term deal.

"I don't get squeezed. I squeeze others," he said.

If a deal doesn't emerge by 12:01 on Saturday morning, the government would partially shut down. Federal workers who are deemed nonessential would be furloughed, many federal contracts with businesses would be suspended and government services that support private firms would be halted.

House Democrats, for their part, are expected to hold firm in opposition of the spending bill unless other priorities get resolved.

"This is like giving you a bowl of doggy doo, put a cherry on top and call it chocolate sundae," House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.), said Thursday.

In the Senate, Republicans seemed to be bracing for a collapse in talks. "The leader has signaled that we ought to have flexible plans and prepare in case we lose the vote," said Sen. Roger Wicker (R., Miss.).

President Donald Trump injected uncertainty into the debate earlier Thursday when he appeared to criticize House GOP leaders' decision to include a six-year reauthorization of the Children's Health Insurance Program in the one-month spending bill. Funding for that program, which covers about 9 million low-income children, ended last September.

"CHIP should be part of a long term solution, not a 30 Day, or short term, extension!" Mr. Trump tweeted.

Mr. Ryan said he had spoken to Mr. Trump Thursday and that the president supported the spending bill, which the White House later confirmed.

Immigration has become part of the spending fight since Mr. Trump in September ended an Obama-era program shielding so-called Dreamers, immigrants brought to the U.S. as children, from deportation. He gave Congress until March to negotiate a replacement to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, and some Democrats, knowing their votes are needed for spending bills, have been pushing to reach an broader immigration agreement that protects such Dreamers.

Senate Democrats who are up for re-election this year in states that Mr. Trump won in 2016 are facing particular pressure to avoid a shutdown. While many say they are undecided, so far only Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia has said he would support the stopgap measure.

But more Democrats, even those who backed the short-term spending bill in December, are opposing the House bill. Virginia Sens. Mark Warner and Tim Kaine, who represent a high number of federal employees whose jobs could be disrupted if the government partially shuts down, voiced opposition on Thursday.

The House bill "punts budget discussions until mid-February," Messrs. Kaine and Warner said in a joint statement. "Congress should remain in session with no recess until we work out a long-term bipartisan budget deal that addresses all issues." They added that they would back a very short-term bill that would keep funding for a few days while Congress addresses other issues.

Spending bills need 60 votes to pass the Senate, where Republicans hold 51 seats. At least three GOP senators have said they would oppose the short-term spending bill: Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Mike Rounds of South Dakota and Rand Paul of Kentucky. Sen. John McCain (R., Ariz.) is absent due to brain cancer, so GOP leaders would need at least 13 Democratic votes.

Republican Sen. Mike Lee of Utah voted against the last continuing resolution and generally opposes stopgap measures. He has declined to voice his support for this bill.

Mr. Rounds is holding out for an agreement with more money and certainty for the military. He backs a spending measure that would last for a few days.

"At this stage of the game, it's going to depend on what the House sends over to us, and whether or not the folks who are part of the defense team over there feel as though they've made enough progress to where we can actually go back to Defense and say we have made a difference," he said.

But Senate Republicans said Mr. McConnell made clear in their lunch that he didn't favor the idea of a one- or two-day spending patch. Keeping the pressure on could favor Democrats tactically, a Senate GOP aide said.

Write to Natalie Andrews at Natalie.Andrews@wsj.com, Kristina Peterson at kristina.peterson@wsj.com and Siobhan Hughes at siobhan.hughes@wsj.com

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

January 18, 2018 19:07 ET (00:07 GMT)