House and Senate leaders have reached a bipartisan deal to avert a government shutdown, agreeing to fund most operations through September of next year.
Lawmakers had been struggling to finalize a budget agreement this week, which had been held up over policy differences between House Republicans and Senate Democrats.
“After months of thorough, business-like, sometimes tough but always civil negotiations, we have reached a responsible, bipartisan and bicameral agreement on funding for government operations for 2015,” said House Appropriations Committee Chairman Hal Rogers and Senate Appropriations Chairwoman Barbara Mikulski in a joint statement Tuesday on the $1.1 trillion agreement.
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Republicans won some significant victories in the deal: While most domestic spending remains flat, the spending bill cuts funding for the IRS and Environmental Protection Agency, and it guts a significant provision in the Dodd-Frank Act.
The agreement scales back a rule requiring Wall Street to take trading of complex derivatives known as swaps out of government-insured banks. Implementation of the so-called “swaps push-out” has been delayed for years, but the deadline is finally approaching, which spurred a furious bout of last-minute lobbying in recent weeks on Capitol Hill.
Democrats did manage to increase funding for major financial regulators — the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Commodities Futures Trading Commission, both of which have been strapped for resources to enforce Dodd-Frank.
The House and Senate are likely to vote on Thursday, although a senior House Republican aide told msnbc that Congress may pass a bill funding the government for a short period in order to give lawmakers enough time to clear various procedural hurdles.
Under a plan pushed by Speaker John Boehner, Congress will pass two bills, one to fund the vast majority of government through the end of the fiscal year and one that would fund just the Department of Homeland Security through the end of February.
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The two-part track is designed to give Republicans the option of adding language to the next round of Homeland Security funding that would block President Obama’s executive action on immigration, which would shield as many as 5 million undocumented immigrants from deportation. The White House has issued a veto threat against legislation targeting its immigration move and tying it to a spending bill would likely precipitate a partial government shutdown standoff. For now, however, the immigration issue is off the table, paving the way for the newly announced deal.









