New House speaker averts shutdown, as GOP tensions flarethedigitalchaps

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Newly elected U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson cleared his first major leadership test Tuesday by passing a short-term funding measure to avert a government shutdown.

Now comes the hard part.

Why We Wrote This

Hard-right Republicans aren’t happy about the stopgap funding measure, but they’re giving their new House speaker some room to maneuver. How long that lasts is another question.

The Senate is expected to pass the stopgap funding measure – known as a continuing resolution, or CR – well before the Friday night deadline. The measure would extend funding for some parts of the government until Jan. 19, 2024, and the rest until Feb. 2. That buys Congress time to try to complete the budget process, which requires passing 12 separate appropriations bills. But Tuesday also underscored fault lines that could bedevil Mr. Johnson in the coming weeks. 

While all but two Democrats voted for the CR, they criticized Republicans for pushing to cut spending below levels agreed to in a bipartisan bill this summer. 

And nearly 100 Republicans voted against the CR, angry that their new speaker would even temporarily continue funding the government at levels set by Democrats before the GOP flipped the House. 

“There’s a group of 20 [GOP] members who are almost impossible to get to ‘yes’ on anything,” says South Dakota Rep. Dusty Johnson of the Republican Main Street Caucus. “They are experts at letting the perfect be the enemy of the good. We’re governing the country in spite of them, rather than with them.”

Newly elected U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson cleared his first major leadership test Tuesday by passing a short-term funding measure to avert a government shutdown.

Now comes the hard part.

Speaker Johnson and his fellow Republicans have vowed to go back to the old way of approving a budget – evaluating one section of the government at a time, allowing lawmakers to weigh in – rather than rolling it all into one “omnibus” bill that leaders negotiate behind closed doors. 

Why We Wrote This

Hard-right Republicans aren’t happy about the stopgap funding measure, but they’re giving their new House speaker some room to maneuver. How long that lasts is another question.

The Senate is expected to pass the stopgap funding measure – known as a continuing resolution, or CR – well before the Friday night deadline. The measure would extend funding for some parts of the government until Jan. 19, 2024, and the rest until Feb. 2. That buys Congress time to try to complete the budget process, which requires passing 12 separate appropriations bills. But Tuesday also underscored fault lines that could bedevil Mr. Johnson in the coming weeks. 

While all but two Democrats voted for the CR to avert a shutdown, they criticized the budget process so far. Republicans have pushed to cut spending below levels agreed to in a bipartisan bill this summer, and have included right-wing priorities in appropriations bills. “This is no way to run a country,” says Democratic Whip Katherine Clark of Massachusetts. 

On the GOP side, nearly 100 Republicans voted against the CR, a measure antithetical for many who are demanding more fiscally conservative government given the record national debt. Some were steamed that their new speaker would continue funding the government at fiscal year 2023 levels, set by Democrats before the GOP flipped the House. 



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