In a significant turn of events on Capitol Hill, the House of Representatives abruptly canceled a critical procedural vote on Tuesday. The vote was slated to determine the fate of a temporary government funding bill, the outcome of which could have far-reaching consequences for the nation.
Initially scheduled for 2:30 p.m. ET, the vote was intended to propel a stopgap measure aimed at funding the federal government through October 31. However, according to an updated legislative schedule released by Democratic Whip Katherine Clark, the House GOP leadership made the unexpected decision to pull the vote.
The looming threat of a government shutdown hovers over the United States as the clock ticks down to midnight on September 30. If Congress fails to pass a temporary funding measure by this deadline, the government will face a potentially crippling shutdown.
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, representing California, has thrown his support behind the idea of a temporary funding measure to keep the government operational. However, he has encountered resistance from the hard-right faction within the GOP.
Over the weekend, key Republican factions within the House brokered a tentative deal in an attempt to avert a shutdown. This deal involved coupling temporary funding with spending cuts and a border security measure, which strongly appealed to the hard-right members of the party.
Nevertheless, after a conference meeting on Tuesday, it became evident that some members of the GOP continued to oppose the proposed spending measure. Rep. Matt Gaetz, a Republican from Florida, declared his intent to mobilize a coalition against the measure, known as a continuing resolution. Gaetz is advocating for a different approach, pushing for the passage of separate appropriation bills to fund government agencies rather than relying on a single temporary measure.
Even if the House had managed to pass the continuing resolution on Tuesday, it faced a formidable obstacle in the Senate. With Democrats holding the majority in the Senate, the measure had virtually no chance of winning approval there.
With the clock ticking and the September 30 deadline fast approaching, the House finds itself with just six days left in its session. The fate of the government funding bill and the specter of a potential government shutdown hang in the balance, with both parties scrambling to find common ground before the crucial deadline expires.
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Original story HERE.