Senate Dems pan talk of short-term spending bill
Senate Democrats are slamming a GOP plan to pass a continuing resolution (CR) ahead the Dec. 9 deadline to fund the government, but stopped short of pledging to block it.
“There’s the question of the continuing resolution that we’re in discussions with the House about that,” he told reporters. “And I don’t have anything to announce today about exactly what form that’s gonna take but obviously, we’re gonna deal with that before we leave here on Dec. 9.”
Democrats and the White House prefer a long-term omnibus spending bill.
But Senate Democrats are stopping short of pledging to block the government funding bill in the upper chamber, where Republicans will need the support of at least six Democrats.
In addition to Reid and Durbin, Democrat Sens. Barbara Mikulski (Md.), the top Democrat on the Appropriations Committee, Patrick Leahy (Vt.) and Brian Schatz (Hawaii) took to the Senate floor to voice their disappointment about taking up a CR.
Mikulski, who is retiring at the end of the year, urged the Senate to take up a longer CR, arguing it could benefit the incoming administration.
“I’m concerned that we will not finish our job on appropriations the way we should finish it,” she said. “Really to do an omnibus, to get the job done, but alas, the clock is slipping away.”
A small number of Senate Republicans have distanced themselves from the short-term spending bill.
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), the chairman of the Armed Services Committee, called the CR a “disgrace” late last week.
“Put simply, this cockamamie idea, this abrogation of our responsibilities called a continuing resolution would shortchange American troops,” he said from the Senate floor.
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