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News / Politics / Election

Harry Reid advocates short-term spending bill

He disagrees with those who want to push it to January

By MARY CLARE JALONICK and ANDREW TAYLOR, MARY CLARE JALONICK and ANDREW TAYLOR, Associated Press
Published: September 1, 2016, 6:23pm

WASHINGTON — The Senate’s top Democrat said Thursday that he and President Barack Obama will not permit a stopgap spending bill this month that kicks Washington’s unfinished budget business into next year, as some tea party conservatives are demanding.

The message from Harry Reid, in a conference call with reporters, is in line with the private plans of House and Senate GOP leaders. For them, a short-term spending bill, required to prevent a government shutdown, is the main order of business in September’s pre-election congressional session, along with paying for the government’s battle against the Zika virus.

The stopgap bill would buy time for Washington to sort out legislation funding the annual operating budgets of agencies.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., had hoped to get the budget process back on track and avoid a catch-all omnibus spending bill, as has happened in the past several years. A Ryan spokesman said the speaker told Republicans in a conference call last week there won’t be any such spending bill this year, and the unfinished business could carry over into the next administration.

Conservatives have revolted over these year-end bills, which often include unrelated measures. And to get Obama’s signature, those bills have been stripped of agenda items earlier sought by Republicans.

But efforts to pass the 12 regular spending bills separately have so far fizzled as the parties have gridlocked over policy provisions.

Conservative groups want to kick the spending bill into the next Congress, which will take office in January.

Reid also pressed for an end to an impasse over emergency money for Zika.

Senators returning to work Tuesday will first revisit battles over Zika and a GOP drive for increases in defense spending.

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