Senate approves spending deal, but short government shutdown likely

Senate Majority Leader John Thune talks to reporters in Washington, Dec. 11. Despite the Senate approving a funding deal on Friday, the government is headed toward a partial shutdown, with the House of Representatives not in session.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune talks to reporters in Washington, Dec. 11. Despite the Senate approving a funding deal on Friday, the government is headed toward a partial shutdown, with the House of Representatives not in session. (Kevin Lamarque, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The U.S. Senate approved a spending deal by a bipartisan, 71-29 vote, on Friday night.
  • However, the House of Representatives won't address the measure until Monday, likely causing a brief shutdown.
  • The debate continues to focuses on immigration enforcement; Department of Homeland Security funding was extended for two weeks to allow for negotiations.

WASHINGTON — The government was headed toward a partial shutdown ​on Friday, as Congress appeared unlikely to approve a deal that would keep a wide swath of operations funded past a midnight deadline.

After hours of delay, the Senate passed ⁠the spending package by a bipartisan vote of 71-29. But the House of Representatives is out of town and not ‌expected to take up the measure until Monday, according to a Republican leadership aide who ⁠spoke on condition of anonymity.

That means a shutdown is all but certain to begin at 12:01 a.m. ‌Eastern Time Saturday (10:01 p.m. MST).

But it ‍could be brief. Lawmakers from both parties have been working to ensure a debate ⁠over immigration enforcement does not disrupt other government operations. ⁠This is a marked contrast from last fall, when Republicans and Democrats dug into their positions in a dispute over health care, prompting a shutdown that lasted a record 43 days and cost the economy an estimated $11 billion.

The government has endured 10 funding gaps of three days or fewer since 1977, most of which had little real-world effect, according to the Congressional Research Service.

Debate over immigration enforcement tactics

The deal approved by the Senate would separate ‍funding for the Department of Homeland Security from the broader funding package, allowing lawmakers to approve spending for agencies like the Pentagon and the Department of Labor while they consider new restrictions on federal immigration agents.

Senate Democrats, angered by the shooting of a second U.S. citizen by immigration agents in Minneapolis last weekend, had threatened to hold up the funding package in an effort to force Trump to rein in DHS, which oversees federal immigration enforcement.

Democrats want to end roving ‌patrols, require agents to wear body cameras and prohibit them from wearing face masks. They also want to require immigration agents to get ‌a search warrant from a judge, rather than from their own officials. Republicans say they are open to some of those ideas.

DHS funding would be extended for two weeks, giving negotiators time to reach an agreement on immigration tactics.

The shooting death of nurse Alex Pretti by federal agents on Saturday spurred widespread public outrage, prompting the Trump ⁠administration to d-escalate operations in the region. ​Pretti's death was the second this month of a U.S. ⁠citizen with no criminal record ‌involving immigration law enforcement agents.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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