As of last week, it appeared the Republican majority in the House had reached a point at which they couldn’t complete even the most basic of tasks. With this in mind, yesterday’s developments in the chamber certainly gave the appearance of progress. NBC News reported:
After two embarrassing failed votes last week, House Republicans regrouped Tuesday and voted to open debate on a package of spending bills they hope will unlock votes to keep the government from shutting down at the end of the week. The rule passed 216-212, with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., as the sole Republican to vote against it.
The good news, if we’re grading on a curve, is that House Speaker Kevin McCarthy successfully kept his members together long enough to start a debate. Ordinarily, this wouldn’t be seen as a notable victory — such procedural votes are so routine, neither party has failed on them in recent decades — but in 2023, standards for the GOP majority are so low, last night’s developments generated national news coverage.
The bad news is that there’s a deadline for a government shutdown in a few days, and the odds of resolving the problem before Saturday at midnight are getting worse, not better.
Yes, the House managed to begin a conversation about a package of appropriations bills, but even if they were to pass — and they very well might not — it wouldn’t move Congress closer to a solution. As we discussed yesterday, these spending measures have moved far to the right in order to gain Republican support, and they’ll never receive support from the Democratic-led Senate or the Democratic White House.
Speaking of the Senate, there was plenty of movement in the upper chamber, too. NBC News also reported on a short-term spending bill that would keep the government’s lights on until Nov. 17.
The bipartisan bill, negotiated between leaders of the Democratic majority and the Republican minority, includes about $6 billion in aid to Ukraine and $6 billion in emergency disaster relief funding for the Federal Emergency Management Agency. It would also prevent a lapse in Federal Aviation Administration authorities through the end of the year and prevent a pay cut for federal firefighters.
So, perhaps this bipartisan package could serve as a vehicle that would solve the problem, at least until mid-November? In theory, sure. But in practice, it’s not quite that simple.








