The US Senate on Friday struggled to pass a US$1.1 trillion spending bill that would avert a looming US Federal Government shutdown, postponing a vote until tomorrow when procedural hurdles begin to evaporate.
Negotiations between Democrats and Republicans to speed the process along collapsed during late-night talks in the nearly empty US Capitol.
Barring any agreement to act in a more streamlined way, the US Senate is on track to hold a procedural vote today at 1am EST, aimed at clearing the way for passage tomorrow.
COLLAPSED
The breakdown in talks capped a week in which passage of the massive spending bill to fund most of the government through Sept. 30, next year, advanced in fits and starts.
Some senators, angered over the bill’s easing of a Dodd-Frank bank regulation law requirement, wanted a shot at removing the provision.
However, demands from some conservative Republicans for a separate vote on an amendment to immediately defund US President Barack Obama’s implementation of a recently announced immigration program further stymied the bill’s progress on Friday.
STOP-GAP BILL
In order to keep federal agencies operating beyond midnight yesterday, when existing funds expire, the Senate is expected to pass a stop-gap bill to temporarily fund the government through the middle of next week.
The US House of Representatives already passed such a measure anticipating the Senate’s inability to finish the broad spending bill this week.
The 1,603-page spending bill, negotiated by Republican and Democratic appropriators and leaders, narrowly passed the House on Thursday following a battle that exposed fraying unity in Obama’s Democratic Party.
A revolt over financial provisions by House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi, long a staunch Obama ally, led to a day of tension on Capitol Hill on Thursday.
Democrats balked at rolling back part of Dodd-Frank, an early legislative achievement of the Obama administration that was passed in response to the 2008 financial crisis and aimed to rein in risk-taking by Wall Street. Democrats also objected to a provision allowing bigger political donations.
The Dodd-Frank provision would kill planned restrictions on derivatives trading by large banks, allowing them to continue trading swaps and futures in units that benefit from federal deposit insurance and US Federal Reserve loans.
Democrats seeking to play down the Pelosi-Obama divide said that the two were in agreement that the Dodd-Frank measure and some other Republican add-ons were objectionable, but differed on stopping the bill because of them.
While Pelosi put up a spirited fight to kill the add-ons, she stopped short of trying to slay the spending bill late on Thursday by demanding “no” votes by her Democrats.
WARNING
The battle was a warning to Republicans against further erosion of Dodd-Frank, or the president’s landmark healthcare law, a House Democratic leadership aide said.
If such challenges arise next year, Pelosi said: “Should the president threaten a veto, the votes will be here in the House to sustain it.”
Democratic fervor against the Dodd-Frank provision was stirred up in part by US Senator Elizabeth Warren, viewed as a possible 2016 presidential candidate. In a Senate floor speech on Friday, she singled out Citigroup’s “influence” on the US political process.
“Let me say this to anyone who is listening at Citi: ‘I agree with you. Dodd-Frank isn’t perfect. It should have broken you into pieces,’” Warren said.
Another possible presidential aspirant, Republican Senator Ted Cruz, delivered a fiery speech late on Friday to rally opposition to Obama’s immigration reforms.
REJECTED
In the 219 to 206 House vote, 67 Republicans rejected the spending bill, largely because it failed to take action to stop Obama’s immigration order. However, that was offset by 57 Democrats who voted in favor.
The spending bill would fund all government agencies through September next year, except for the US Department of Homeland Security, which would get an extension only through Feb. 27.
That is the department mainly in charge of implementing the order announced by Obama last month.
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