The stopgap measure would keep the government funded through Sept. 30. But Democratic leaders are opposed, and it’s unclear if Johnson can pass it with only Republicans.
Congress faces a Friday deadline to avert a government shutdown, with President Donald Trump backing a House GOP plan to pass a continuing resolution that would keep departments and agencies funded through Sept.
W ASHINGTON — House Republicans unveiled a spending bill Saturday that would keep federal agencies funded through Sept. 30, pushing ahead with a go-it-alone strategy that seems certain to spark a major confrontation with Democrats over the contours of government spending.
House GOP leaders on Saturday unveiled a stopgap funding bill, known as a continuing resolution, that will fund the government at current levels through September 2025.
The 99-page bill would provide a slight boost to defense programs while trimming nondefense programs below 2024 budget year levels.
House Republicans on Saturday unveiled a bill to keep government funded for six months, a blueprint that would boost allocations for defense, make cuts elsewhere, but largely retain funding levels set last year by President Biden.
Republicans in control of the U.S. House of Representatives unveiled their six-month stopgap government funding bill on Saturday to avoid a potential government shutdown on March 14. The proposal would fund the government through September,
U.S. Rep. Rosa DeLauro on Tuesday launched a new effort to pass legislation requiring that guns be locked up in homes with kids.
Government funding expires on March 14, and members of the “four corners” — House Appropriations Committee Chairman Tom Cole (R-OK) and ranking member Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) and Senate ...
The US president's party, despite struggling in the past to pass funding bills on its own, is pushing ahead with a go-it-alone strategy US House Republicans unveiled a spending bill on Saturday that would keep federal agencies funded through September 30,
Connecticut lawmakers gathered in Washington Tuesday to create federal requirements for safe gun storage on a national level. U.S. Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn),