Washington Examiner

Lawmakers rush back to Capitol Hill with limited time and extensive agenda.

Lawmakers Face⁣ Uphill Battle as Congress Returns from Recess

As lawmakers ⁢begin to⁢ return from‌ their annual⁣ August recess, ⁣both​ chambers of Congress face a ‍laundry list of legislation ⁢that⁢ must be passed before the end ⁤of the⁤ month.​ But finding a path forward is ⁤easier said than done.

The Senate reconvenes ‌on Tuesday, one⁣ week‍ earlier than the ​House, which will come back in session on Sept. 12. That gives the upper chamber a handful more‍ working days than the 11 the House has to pass all 12 appropriations bills to fund the government through the next fiscal ⁤year.

SENATE CONSIDERS MOVING SPENDING BILLS FORWARD, SETTING UP FIGHT ⁣WITH HOUSE GOP

But the ‍appropriations bills are not the only legislation on their plate. They will ⁣need⁢ to tackle other must-pass measures, such as‍ the farm bill.

Here’s a ​breakdown of what‌ Congress needs to pass ⁤or punt ​by the end⁢ of the month and what demands are grinding the process to⁣ a halt.

Annual spending bills

Congress must pass its annual budget before the new fiscal year‍ begins on Oct. 1, or else lawmakers risk a government shutdown.⁤ Budget disagreements are ⁤typical as both parties fight over spending priorities, with a final deal often not being made until the‌ eleventh hour after a marathon‌ voting session.

The budget‌ consists of 12 bills‍ that must ‍pass through both chambers before being sent to the president’s desk. In ⁣recent years, these ‍bills⁣ have been combined into just one piece of legislation known as an omnibus,‍ allowing Congress to advance its ⁤entire budget with⁤ just ⁤one vote.

However, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), facing pressure from his right‍ flank due to ⁢Republicans’ narrow House majority,⁣ has committed to getting the chamber back ‌to‍ regular order.

The House managed to pass⁤ just one ⁢of ​the 12 bills, funding military construction, before adjourning for⁣ its six-week recess, while ​other bills ‌either⁤ failed to make it ⁣to the floor for ⁤a vote, such as the agriculture‌ bill,⁤ or are still ‌being finalized in committee.

Meanwhile, the Senate Appropriations​ Committee,⁤ which under new leadership ‍has also committed to a bottoms-up appropriations process, has approved all 12 bills, but lawmakers have not⁣ yet advanced the legislation‌ to ⁤the floor for a vote.

House and Senate on collision course ​over spending levels

As the‍ House ⁣and Senate work to advance their separate versions of the 12 appropriations⁣ bill,⁢ the two chambers are at odds over what ‍top-line numbers to set spending at.

The Senate advanced caps matching those laid out in ⁤the debt‌ limit agreement negotiated between McCarthy and President Joe‍ Biden. However, conservatives, angry that the deal did not cut spending further, have strong-armed the speaker into lower top lines that Democrats refuse ⁢to pass.

Both sides ⁢are digging ​their heels in as the Sept. 30 deadline nears,‍ raising the prospect ‌of a government shutdown.

“The only way to avoid ‍a shutdown is through bipartisanship,‌ so I have urged House Republican ‍leadership to follow the Senate’s lead ⁣and pass bipartisan appropriations bills,”‌ Senate Majority ‌Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) wrote in a “Dear Colleague” letter on Friday.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has‌ also​ urged his GOP ⁢colleagues in the​ House to adhere to the​ debt ceiling⁣ agreement.

“The ​speaker and the president reached ⁢an agreement, which I ⁣supported, in connection with raising the debt ‌ceiling, to set the spending levels⁢ for next‌ year,” McConnell told reporters‍ in‌ Kentucky. “The House then turned around and passed spending levels that were below that level. … That’s not going to be replicated in the Senate.”

House Republicans lay out other demands ‍in spending fight

Even as‍ House​ Republicans‌ push for lower spending levels, some hard-line conservatives are ‍going so far as to threaten withholding their support if additional demands⁤ aren’t met.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene​ (R-GA) drew⁤ her own red line during ‌a constituent town hall meeting⁤ on Thursday,⁢ telling voters she⁢ would not vote to‍ fund ​the ⁤government unless the following demands were met: an impeachment ‍inquiry into Biden, the defunding of⁤ the federal government’s “weaponization” ‍against ⁣conservatives, the elimination⁤ of all COVID-19 vaccine‌ mandates, and the end of military funding to Ukraine.

“I’m not going to continue to fund the⁣ Biden ⁣regime’s weaponized government,” Greene said. “I will be happy to‌ work with all of my colleagues. I will work with the‍ speaker of the House. I will work ⁢with everyone. But I will not ⁢fund those ⁢things, and I thought it was most ⁢important for me to ‌tell you all first ‌because I⁢ work for you.”

If Congress ​can’t pass all 12 of its bills before the end ⁤of the month, lawmakers will ⁣typically agree to a continuing resolution that allows the government to⁤ operate at the same spending levels until ⁣a new agreement is made. However, some hard-line ​conservatives are already ruling that process out, noting they aren’t afraid of⁤ enforcing a‌ government shutdown to get the budget‍ passed.

House Republicans in the ‍Freedom Caucus similarly ‌laid out their list of⁣ demands last month, outlining three conditions that must be met in order ​for their support on a⁣ short-term continuing resolution,‌ including a vote on the border‌ security bill that passed the House earlier this year and‌ a commitment ⁤to “address the unprecedented ‌weaponization of the Justice Department and ‍FBI.”

Caucus⁤ members also say ⁣they would ​oppose any continuing resolution that does not “end the Left’s cancerous woke policies in the Pentagon.”

Other priorities

Meanwhile, Schumer⁣ laid out a number of other ‍priorities the Senate will focus on throughout September, including legislation on ‍artificial intelligence and rail safety, the ⁣Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization,⁢ and drug pricing reforms.

Schumer also vowed to continue providing support⁢ and military aid to Ukraine, which could put ‍the upper ⁤chamber in a⁤ standoff with a group of House Republicans who want to revoke⁢ funding altogether.

“Finding ⁤compromise is never easy, but our efforts ⁢to do‌ precisely that ‌have led to significant accomplishments​ under this majority,” Schumer ⁢wrote on Friday. “I thank all of you for your diligent work so far on such a wide ‌range of issues and for taking our message⁤ of⁢ lowering costs and economic prosperity for the ‍middle class to the American people.‌ We must keep​ working in good faith to achieve ⁤even more.”

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