Biden to Meet with Congressional Leaders as Government Shutdown Looms
In an attempt to prevent a partial government shutdown that would start in just four days, President Joe Biden will meet with the leading Democrats and Republicans in Congress on Tuesday. He will also be pleading with them to approve an aid package for Israel and Ukraine.
The discussion at the White House takes place about two months after Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson reached an agreement on a level of discretionary spending for the fiscal year that started on October 1st, totaling $1.59 trillion.
Infighting among Republicans, who have a razor-thin majority in the House of Representatives, has mostly prevented Congress from carrying out its fundamental responsibility of providing money for the government, notwithstanding the agreement.
“A basic, basic priority or duty of Congress is to keep the government open,” White House spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters on Monday. “So that’s what the president wants to see. He’ll have those conversations.”
The spending bill is being held up by demands from ultra-conservative Republicans in the House who want to see spending cuts and policy positions injected into how dollars are spent. A group of hard-right Republicans has brought the government to the brink of a shutdown or a partial shutdown three times in the past six months.
Schumer and Johnson traded accusations in recent days over who was to blame for the stalemate. On Monday, Schumer told reporters that “Democrats are doing everything we can to avoid a shutdown.”
The first batch of government funding, which includes money for agencies that oversee agriculture and transportation, will run out on Friday at midnight, while funding for some agencies including the Pentagon and the State Department will expire on March 8.
The government spending package is separate from the national security aid bill that includes Ukraine and Israel funding, but Biden will make the case for both.
The House is under pressure to pass the $95 billion national security package that bolsters aid for Ukraine, Israel as well as the Indo-Pacific. That legislation cleared the Senate on a 70-29 vote earlier this month, but Johnson has resisted putting up the aid bill for a vote in the House.
White House has ramped up public pressure on Johnson in recent weeks as Ukraine marked the second anniversary of the Russian invasion.
“What the president wants to see is we want to make sure that the national security interests of the American people gets put first and is not used as a political football,” Jean-Pierre said. “We want to make sure that gets done.”