Any final deal will need to be passed by the Democrat-controlled Senate and the Republican-controlled House. Photo / Kent Nishimura, The New York Times
Republican and Democratic leaders on Capitol Hill have reached a $1.66 trillion (NZ$2.65t) agreement on the level of US federal spending for 2024, in a move that brings Congress closer to avoiding a costly government shutdown.
The news was jointly announced on Sunday by Chuck Schumer, the Democratic Senate majorityleader, and Mike Johnson, the Republican Speaker of the House.
The agreement comes less than two weeks before a budget deadline, and several Republican hardliners cast doubt on whether the framework could be passed in time.
Funding for several parts of the federal government is set to run out on January 19, and for others on February 2, unless the two sides can hammer out more detailed budget bills.
Any final deal will need to be passed by the Democrat-controlled Senate and the Republican-controlled House, and signed into law by President Joe Biden.
The budget negotiations are separate from a supplementary request from Biden for billions of dollars in additional foreign aid for Ukraine and Israel.
In a joint statement with Hakeem Jeffries, the top House Democrat, Schumer said the framework agreed on Sunday “clears the way for Congress to act over the next few weeks in order to maintain important funding priorities for the American people and avoid a government shutdown”.
In a letter to Republican colleagues on Sunday afternoon, Johnson said Republicans had “secured hard-fought concessions”, including $10 billion in cuts to the Internal Revenue Service and a clawback of $6.1b in unused Covid-19 pandemic relief funds.
“The result is real savings to American taxpayers and real reductions in the federal bureaucracy,” Johnson said.
Biden also welcomed the news, saying in a statement that the funding framework “moves us one step closer to preventing a needless government shutdown and protecting important national priorities”.
But the deal has already come under attack from hardliners in Republican ranks who have pushed for steeper budget cuts and could wield outsized influence over the process.
“It’s even worse than we thought,” the conservative House Freedom Caucus said in a social media post late on Sunday. “This is total failure.”
Chip Roy, a Republican congressman from Texas, called the framework “terrible” and said it “gives away...leverage”.
“As usual, we keep spending more money we don’t have,” he added.
Republicans control the House by a razor-thin margin after the departure in recent weeks of several members of Congress, including former Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy.
McCarthy was ousted as Speaker in part due to fellow Republicans’ distaste for a deal he struck last year with Biden on government funding.