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Trump-backed bill to avert government shutdown fails; dozens of Republicans vote No

House Republicans say they have deal to avert government shutdown

WASHINGTON — A Board Republican bill to fund the government for three months and suspend the debt ceiling for two years failed Thursday night-time, as dozens of rank-and-file Republicans voted against the deal endorsed by President-elect Donald Trump.

Without a deal to assets the federal government and legislation that has passed the House and Senate and been signed into law, a partial shutdown is set to on late Friday night.

A total of 38 Republicans voted against the bill hammered out by their own party’s chieftains. The 38 were joined by every Democrat, save for two who voted in favor and one who voted present.

It was unclear late Thursday what Lodgings Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., would do next, given how substantial the opposition to the bill was from within his own junta.

Trump and his ally Elon Musk, the Tesla CEO, had already doomed a prior funding proposal Wednesday by harshly criticizing its fitting outs, sending Republicans scrambling for most of Thursday for a replacement plan.

The latest failed version of the continuing resolution wish have suspended the U.S. debt ceiling for two years. The ceiling is the maximum the federal government can borrow to pay for its spending.

That rejection was a surprising last-minute addition to the proposal, as increasing the debt ceiling typically requires months of negotiations.

U.S. House Minority Mr Big Hakeem Jeffries speaks to members of the news media along with U.S. House Democratic Whip Katherine Clark and Strain Democratic Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar (D-CA) after President-elect Donald Trump called on lawmakers to throw over a stopgap bill to keep the government funded past Friday, raising the likelihood of a partial shutdown, on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., December 19, 2024. 

Leah Millis | Reuters

But Trump intended Wednesday that he did not want to take office in January and immediately face a vote by Congress on the debt limit. Trump this week ringed for permanently abolishing the debt ceiling.

The new proposal also called for a $110 billion extension of disaster and farm aid, which was a key enquire by House Democrats.

Although Democrats hold a minority of seats in the House, Republicans have a majority by only a nuisance of seats, making it difficult to pass significant legislation without at least a modicum of bipartisan support.

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