WASHINGTON (AP) —
House leaders unveiled a $1.4 trillion government-wide spending package
with an unusually large load of unrelated provisions catching a ride on
the last train out of Congress this year.
A
House vote was slated for Tuesday on the sprawling package, some 2,313
pages long, as lawmakers wrap up reams of unfinished work — and vote on
impeaching President Donald Trump.
The
legislation would forestall a government shutdown this weekend and give
Trump steady funding for his U.S.-Mexico border fence. The year-end
package is anchored by a $1.4 trillion spending measure that caps a
difficult, months-long battle over spending priorities.
The
mammoth measure made public Monday takes a split-the-differences
approach that’s a product of divided power in Washington, offering
lawmakers of all stripes plenty to vote for — and against. House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., was a driving force, along with administration
pragmatists such as Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who negotiated
the summertime budget deal that it implements.
Trump
hasn’t said for sure that he’ll sign the measure. He invariably has
second thoughts, but he’s not interested in another government shutdown
and has always bowed to Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell, R-Ky., when they’ve teamed up on compromise spending
packages.
Retired
coal miners and labor union opponents of Obama-era taxes on high-cost
health plans came away with big wins in weekend negotiations by top
congressional leaders and the Trump White House. The bill would also
increase the age nationwide for purchasing tobacco products from 18 to
21, and offers business-friendly provisions on export financing, flood
insurance and immigrant workers.
The
roster of add-ons grew over the weekend to include permanent repeal of a
tax on high-cost “Cadillac” health insurance benefits and finance
health care and pension benefits for about 100,000 retired union coal
miners threatened by the insolvency of their pension fund. A tax on
medical devices and health insurance plans would also be repealed
permanently.
The
deficit tab for the package grew as well — almost $400 billion over 10
years to repeal the three so-called “Obamacare” taxes alone — with a
companion package to extend several business-friendly tax breaks still
under negotiation. The Obama-era taxes have previously been suspended on
a piecemeal basis.
The
legislation is laced with provisions reflecting divided power in
Washington. Republicans maintained the status quo on several
abortion-related battles and on funding for Trump’s border wall.
Democrats controlling the House succeeded in winning a 3.1 percent raise
for federal civilian employees and the first installment of funding on
gun violence research after more than two decades of gun lobby
opposition.
The
sweeping legislation, introduced as two packages for political and
tactical purposes, is part of a major final burst of legislation that’s
passing Congress this week despite bitter partisan divisions and
Wednesday’s likely impeachment of Trump. Thursday promises a vote on a
major rewrite of the North American Free Trade Agreement, while the
Senate is about to send Trump the annual defense policy bill for the
59th year in a row.
The
core of the spending bill is formed by the 12 annual agency
appropriations bills passed by Congress each year. It fills in the
details of a bipartisan framework from July that delivered about $100
billion in agency spending increases over the coming two years instead
of automatic spending cuts that would have sharply slashed the Pentagon
and domestic agencies.
The
increase in the tobacco purchasing age to 21 also applies to
e-cigarettes and vaping devices and gained momentum after McConnell
signed on.
Other add-ons include a variety of provisions sought by business and labor interests and their lobbyists in Washington.
For
business, there’s a seven-year extension of the charter of the
Export-Import Bank, which helps finance transactions benefiting U.S.
exporters, as well as a renewal of the government’s terrorism risk
insurance program. The financially troubled government flood insurance
program would be extended through September, as would several visa
programs for both skilled and seasonal workers.
Labor
won repeal of the so-called Cadillac tax, a 40% tax on high-cost
employer health plans, which was originally intended to curb rapidly
growing health care spending. But it disproportionately affected
high-end plans won under union contracts, and Democratic labor allies
had previously succeeded in temporary repeals.
Democrats
controlling the House won increased funding for early childhood
education and a variety of other domestic programs. They also won higher
Medicaid funding for the cash-poor government of Puerto Rico, which is
struggling to recover from hurricane devastation and a resulting
economic downturn.
While
Republicans touted defense hikes and Democrats reeled off numerous
increases for domestic programs, most of the provisions of the spending
bill enjoy bipartisan support, including increases for medical research,
combating the opioid epidemic, and Head Start and childcare grants to
states.
Democrats
also secured $425 million for states to upgrade their election systems,
and they boosted the U.S. Census budget $1.4 billion above Trump’s
request. They won smaller increases for the Environmental Protection
Agency, renewable energy programs and affordable housing.
“We
are scaling up funding for priorities that will make our country safer
and stronger and help hardworking families get ahead,” said House
Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Nita Lowey, D-N.Y.
The
outcome in the latest chapter in the longstanding battle over Trump’s
border wall awards Trump with $1.4 billion for new barriers — equal to
last year’s appropriation — while preserving Trump’s ability to use his
budget powers to tap other accounts for several times that amount.
That’s a blow for liberal opponents of the wall but an acceptable
trade-off for pragmatic-minded Democrats who wanted to gain $27 billion
in increases for domestic programs and avert the threat of simply
funding the government on autopilot.
Because
dozens of Democrats might vote against the border wall, Pelosi is
pairing money for the Department of Homeland Security with the almost
$700 billion Pentagon budget, which is guaranteed to win GOP votes to
offset Democratic defections.
The
coal miners’ pension provision, opposed by House GOP conservatives like
Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., had the backing of Trump and
powerful Senate GOP Leader McConnell and Trump. Sen. Joe Manchin,
D-W.Va., was a dogged force behind the scenes and said the other leaders
rolled the House GOP leader, who also lost a behind-the-scenes battle
with Pelosi on parochial California issues.
“Something
had to be done and we finally got Mitch McConnell to sign onto the
bill,” Manchin said. “But we could not move McCarthy. Then finally we
just had to move forward and they did it.”
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