A Trump-backed bill to avoid a government shutdown fails in the House amid GOP revolt
Despite support from GOP leadership and President-elect Donald Trump, the proposal aimed at averting an imminent government shutdown failed by a vote of 174 to 235 in the House of Representatives on Thursday afternoon.
Package of speaker Mike Johnson The Appropriations Committee was the second attempt to pass a resolution to fund the government until March 2025. The so-called “Plan B” was launched after Trump and the billionaire refused. Elon Musk A resolution aimed at funding the federal government sank Wednesday.
Thirty-eight Republicans voted against the proposal, along with almost all Democrats in the House of Representatives. Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, Those who earlier in the day called the bill “laughable” celebrated the package’s failure late Thursday.
“The Musk-Johnson government shutdown bill was soundly defeated. MAGA extremists in the House GOP are not serious about helping working-class Americans,” Jeffries said in a letter. Another to Bluesky. “They are simply carrying out the orders of donors and wealthy puppeteers.”
In addition to maintaining federal government operations, the bill would have given the incoming Trump administration and the GOP-controlled Congress a two-year suspension of the debt ceiling. Trump warned that he would pressure any Republican who voted for a financing bill that does not include raising or suspending the debt limit.
Republicans who voted against the bill indicated their opposition to any long-term adjustments to the debt ceiling. Texas State Rep. Chip Roy He told reporters He said he would “go to vote on another increase in the debt ceiling” without specifying what spending could be cut from the federal budget.
This failure constitutes another blow to Trump’s supposed mandate. The proposal was supported before the vote in A Another to social truth.
“Success in Washington! “Speaker Mike Johnson and the House have reached a very good agreement for the American people,” Trump wrote. “All Republicans, even Democrats, should do what is best for our country and vote yes on this bill tonight!”
The maneuver used to advance the funding proposal came with a requirement that two-thirds of House members approve the measure. His failure will enable Johnson to re-introduce the bill on the condition of a simple majority to pass it. And if Thursday’s vote is any indication, it won’t cross that barrier either. Without an approved resolution, the federal government will go into lockdown on Saturday.
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