Senate Sends Shutdown-Averting Spending Bills to Trump

Senate Sends Shutdown-Averting Spending Bills to Trump

The Senate on Thursday approved a pair of bills that will set line-by-line funding for every agency in the federal government and provide most of them with a significant funding boost, avoiding a shutdown. 


The pair of appropriations bills will now head to President Trump, who is expected to sign them into law ahead of a Friday night deadline when the current continuing resolution keeping government open is set to expire. The bills will allocate $1.4 trillion: $738 billion to the military and $632 billion to non-defense agencies, increases over fiscal 2019 of $22 billion for the Pentagon and $27 billion for non-defense. 


Top lawmakers reached an agreement with the Trump administration last week on the spending agreement after months of negotiations and two continuing resolutions. Appropriators unveiled the two bills—divided into national security and domestic categories—late Monday afternoon and the House approved them on Tuesday. The domestic and international assistance bill passed the Senate 71-23; the national security bill, 81-11.


A slate of policy changes that will impact federal employees and operations across government also made their way into the final appropriations language, including a 3.1% pay raise for the entire workforce. See a full breakdown of the most significant takeaways for agencies here.


Negotiators were motivated to reach a deal on full appropriations by a two-year budget agreement Trump signed into law earlier this year, which significantly raised caps for both defense and nondefense spending. Republicans highlighted their priorities of boosting military funding and securing some funding for fencing along the U.S.-Mexico border, a sticking point that led to a 35-day shutdown that ended earlier this year. Democrats pointe ..

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