WASHINGTON — House Republicans on Thursday fined a spending deal to avoid each other. Government shutdownIt was just hours after the original bilateral agreement. Torpedo by President-elect Donald Trump.
House Appropriations Chair Tom Cole, R-Okla., told reporters Thursday afternoon that Republicans had reached a new deal on government spending but provided few details about what would be changed from the initial clean package that I was involved in everything from government funding to prescription changes. The drug plans to facilitate the transfer of NFL football stadiums.
“We have a deal, we expect a vote” Thursday, Cole said as he left the speaker’s office on Capitol Hill. He would not provide further details.
In a post on TruthSocial, Trump hailed the deal as a “success” and reviewed what it contained, saying it would extend the debt ceiling until January 30, 2027, after the 2026 midterm elections. will suspend for another two years. .
“Speaker Mike Johnson and the House have made a very good deal for the American people. The New Deal for Americans Relief Act of 2024 will keep the government open, fund our great farmers and others, and give those people Relief will be provided to those severely affected by this devastating hurricane,” Trump wrote.
Democrats were not part of the renegotiation agreement and have not yet signed it, however, two sources with knowledge of the negotiations told NBC News.
A source in the Democratic leadership said that Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, DN.Y. has seen the agreement but has not yet signed it. A spokesman for Jefferies did not immediately comment on the alleged deal. Jefferies has previously said that any discussion on whether to raise or eliminate the debt ceiling is “premature at best.”
The earlier agreement was broken.
Speaker Johnson, R-La., and House Republican leaders were scrambling early Thursday to craft a fallback plan to keep the government open, which is scheduled to shut down after the calendar turns to Saturday. Billionaire Elon Musk and Trump teamed up with conservatives to sink the original bilateral funding deal.
The new deal comes less than 36 hours before a deadline to fund the government or trigger a federal government shutdown and furloughs.
Democratic leaders have cheered Johnson and his team for withdrawing from the previous bipartisan deal they signed. Some noted that this undermines the House Republican leadership’s credibility in any future negotiations.
Wednesday evening, Trump threw an unexpected wrench into the funding negotiations. When he criticized the bipartisan funding deal that Johnson had negotiated. And, in a last-minute demand, he threatened to go after Republicans unless they included a provision to extend the debt ceiling, months before a deadline to avert an economically devastating default next year. Earlier – Substantial demand with less than two days before the shutdown deadline.
On Thursday morning, Trump went even further, telling NBC News that Congress needed to. Eliminate the loan limit In an exhaustive phone interview, Trump noted that some Democrats have wanted to repeal the debt ceiling for years and that he would “lead the charge” in that effort.
Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut, the former Appropriations Committee chair who is now the panel’s top Democrat, was among those who criticized Johnson and Republicans for withdrawing from a bipartisan funding deal that It was closed only a few days ago.
He said there was a “good deal” going forward, “but for President Musk.”
Asked if the tech billionaire was calling the shots for Republicans, DeLauro replied: “I’ll see that!”
(Trump told NBC News on Thursday that Musk had only issued a series of statements after speaking with the president-elect to hammer out a bilateral deal, saying the two agreed on the matter. ).
Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., who just won re-election in a swing district, said on MSNBC that it was “very clear, Donald Trump is in charge” and that Republicans had Democratic support for a bill. Need
“The reality here is very simple. We have to negotiate,” Lawler told MSNBC host Andrea Mitchell before Thursday’s deal announcement. “I would remind everyone that we are in divided government. Still, Democrats control the Senate and the White House, so there will have to be bipartisan negotiations.