With time and money running out, the chair of the Senate Budget Committee, Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) called on her colleagues to pass a clean funding bill now to prevent a government shutdown on Oct. 1 and save their broader policy disagreements for a later time.
By the time the Senate is finished working out its spending bill, Murray says the House may have just a matter of hours to take action before the deadline. Right now, the bill is in the Senate where Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) is expected to introduce his version of the legislation by Thursday, stripping away House language that defunds health reform and shortening the original funding timetable from 10 weeks (Oct. 1-Dec. 15) to just 6 weeks (Oct. 1-Nov. 15).
Murray said on Wednesday’s The Daily Rundown that the shorter timetable will help get Congress focused on the budget more quickly.
“There’s a lot of agreement that we need to replace sequestration with smarter cuts and a better policy,” said Murray. “So we’ve got to figure a way to do that responsibly sooner rather than later.”
Murray, who also serves as the secretary of the Democratic conference, said government funding should not be held up because of discussions that belong in what she called “the greater budget debate.”








