The House Freedom Caucus says the package breaks Republicansâ promise to pass individual spending bills.
Months of drawn-out negotiations over fiscal year 2024 appropriations may soon come to a close on Capitol Hill.
The 1,050-page minibusâor small omnibusâauthorizes funding for the departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Justice, Energy, Interior, Veterans Affairs, Transportation, and Housing and Urban Development, as well as military construction, the Food and Drug Administration, and other agencies.
Specifically, the minibus slashes Environmental Protection Agency funding by 10 percent, FBI appropriations by 6 percent, and funds for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives by 7 percent. It also includes policy provisions aimed at reining in agencies Republicans say have been weaponized against conservatives.
âThis legislation forbids the Department of Justice from targeting parents exercising their right to free speech before school boards, while it blocks the Biden administration from stripping Second Amendment rights from veterans,â Mr. Johnson said.
The move to bundle the legislation marks a departure from the stated goal of many congressional Republicansâincluding the speaker himselfâto do away with the recent practice of governance via massive omnibus bills.
Noting this, the House Freedom Caucus urged Republicans to oppose the package and âkeep their promises to the American people.â
âDespite giving Democrats higher spending levels, the omnibus text released so far punts on nearly every single Republican policy priority. Worst of all, the omnibus surrenders Republicansâ leverage to force radical Democrats to the table to truly secure the southern border and end the purposeful, dangerous mass release of illegal aliens into the United States.â
Bills considered under suspension of the rules require a two-thirds majority for passage, but they also sidestep the perils presented by procedural votes.
Speaking with reporters ahead of the vote, Mr. Johnson acknowledged that Republicans would not get everything they wanted out of the deal. But with only a two-vote majority in the House, he said that was a reality his conference was going to have to accept.
âWe only control one-half of one-third of the federal government, so we have to be realistic about what weâre able to achieve. But in spite of that, we have an appropriations package that is going to cut non-defense, non-VA discretionary spending, and it is going to increase defense spending,â he said.
âWe have a lot more priorities and things that we need to advance, but the reality, as we all recognize, is that we have to grow the House majority, take back the Senate for the Republican Party, and win the White House. And Iâm here to tell you the reason weâre optimistic is we believe those things are going to happen in November.â
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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