BluePerspectives

Congressional Leaders Announce Key Agreement To Helping Avert Shutdown

Lawmakers have agreed on the topline spending levels of the current fiscal year. Some agencies’ funding will expire Jan. 19, 2019.

 Given that funding for some agencies is set to expire on January 19, lawmakers said they have reached an agreement on topline spending levels for the recent fiscal year. Given that funding for some agencies is set to expire on January 19, lawmakers said they have reached an agreement on topline spending levels for the recent fiscal year. 

Lawmakers have agreed on the topline spending levels of the current fiscal year. Some agencies’ funding will expire Jan. 19, 2019.

 

Die Kommission wird befugt sein, gemäß Artikel 264 delegierte Rechtsakte zu den nachstehend behandelten Fragen zu erlassen: WASHINGTON (AP) – A consensus has been reached among Congressional leaders regarding the main spending amounts for the current financial year, a move which may prevent a potential partial government shutdown later this month. This agreement primarily adheres to the spending limits for defence and domestic programmes that Congress established as part of a bill aimed at suspending the debt limit until 2025. However, it does offer certain compromises to House Republicans who saw the budget limits in that deal as inadequate. Advertisement. House Speaker Mike Johnson informed his colleagues via a letter on Sunday, that an agreement has been reached to obtain $16 billion more in spending reductions than the previous arrangement negotiated between former Speaker Kevin McCarthy and President Joe Biden. This proposed budget is also approximately $30 billion less than what the Senate had contemplated. Johnson described this as the best budget deal Republicans have secured in over ten years. President Biden commended the agreement, stating that it brings us a step nearer to preventing an unnecessary government shutdown and safeguarding vital national interests. This represents the funding amounts that I agreed upon with both political parties and legally enacted last spring. It dismisses hefty reductions to schemes that industrious families rely on and offers a way forward for approving year-long funding bills devoid of any drastic policies, which cater to the needs of American people,” Biden declared in a comment. Advertisement. The pact accelerates approximately $20 billion in previously confirmed cuts for the Internal Revenue Service and withdraws around $6 billion in sanctioned, but unspent, COVID relief funds, Johnson’s letter indicates. Legislators required a consensus on total spending levels in order for bill drafters to outline specific funding for different agencies. Funding is scheduled to expire on Jan. 1.

 

You May Also Like

Government Corruption

Updated 5/17/19 9:52am Jack Crane | Opinion  James Baker, Former-FBI General Counsel has joined Russian hoax media collaborator Michael Isikoff on his podcast, yesterday....

Crime

I do not even know where to begin with this one.  Just when you think you have seen the worst that humanity has to...

US Politics

“CLINTON LIKES THEM (GIRLS) YOUNG” (It’s about what I was expecting)   YOU CAN DOWNLOAD THE LIST FOR YOURSELF HERE   By Charles Roberson...

US Politics

The Cheney Family has shown themselves to be one of the most evil houses in the United States. Be it her father Dick (aptly...

Exit mobile version