Congress passes short-term funding bill to avoid partial shutdown

By Aditi Sangal and Elise Hammond, CNN

Updated 9:21 PM ET, Thu February 29, 2024
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8:24 p.m. ET, February 29, 2024

Senate passes stopgap bill

From CNN's Clare Floran, Ted Barrett, Morgan Rimmer and Kristin Wilson

The House and Senate both passed a stopgap bill on Thursday to avert a partial government shutdown at the end of the week.

The Senate vote was 77 to 13. Republican Sens. John Cornyn and John Thune, potential candidates to take over as Senate GOP leader after Mitch McConnell steps down from the position in November, both voted in favor.

Now, the bill is cleared for President Joe Biden’s signature. 

Why this matters: Congress is confronting a pair of shutdown deadlines on March 1 and March 8. This stopgap bill will shift the deadlines to March 8 and March 22 to give lawmakers more time to pass full-year appropriations bills.

This post has been updated with the vote.

7:56 p.m. ET, February 29, 2024

NOW: Senate voting on stopgap bill to avoid partial government shutdown at end of the week

From CNN's Clare Floran, Kristin Wilson, Ted Barrett and Morgan Rimmer

The Senate floor as voting gets underway on Thursday, February 29.
The Senate floor as voting gets underway on Thursday, February 29. Senate TV

The Senate is voting on a stopgap measure that will fund the government on a short-term basis — avoiding a partial shutdown at the end of this week.

The House passed the bill earlier Thursday. The bill buys lawmakers more time to pass full-year appropriations bills.

4:38 p.m. ET, February 29, 2024

House Republicans vent frustration over short-term stopgap bill after Speaker cuts deal with Democrats

From CNN's Sam Fossum, Manu Raju and Kristin Wilson

House Republicans expressed frustration Thursday after a short-term bill to fund the government ahead of a Friday deadline passed the House with the help of Democrats after House Speaker Mike Johnson cut a deal with the White House and Senate on government funding.

Rep. Chip Roy, a member of the House Freedom Caucus and a deficit hawk, criticized the Speaker over his handling of the issue and lamented that he believes something has to change in Washington. 

“It's not where we need to be to actually fundamentally change the town. We have a trillion dollars of interest in 2026, guys. I mean, I don't know what to tell you. Something's got to stop. Something's got to change," he said.

Rep. Nancy Mace, who was one of the eight lawmakers who voted to strip former Speaker Kevin McCarthy of the gavel, defended her vote even after Johnson reached a deal not too different from what ultimately led to the former Speaker’s ouster.

“He inherited a lot of Kevin McCarthy's bad deals, number one, so I don't fault him for that. But number two, I'm gonna say the same thing I've always said, Republicans and Democrats alike are spending too damn much, period,” she told CNN’s Manu Raju.

When pressed by CNN on what policy wins she believes they have achieved following McCarthy's ouster, she pointed to greater transparency from Johnson.

2:21 p.m. ET, February 29, 2024

House passes one-week stopgap measure to avert shutdown

From CNN's Clare Foran, Kristin Wilson and Haley Talbot

A man walks near the U.S. Capitol in Washington on February 27.
A man walks near the U.S. Capitol in Washington on February 27. Nathan Howard/Reuters

The House has voted to pass a stopgap bill that will extend government funding and avoid a partial shutdown.

The vote was 320 to 99, with 113 Republicans voting in favor and 97 Republicans voting against. The bill will fund the government until March 22 to give lawmakers more time to pass full-year appropriations bills.

Two Democrats voted "no" — Reps. Mike Quigley and Jake Auchincloss.

Now that the House has passed this bill, it will next go to the Senate. Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said he hoped it could pass his chamber as soon as this evening. 

2:05 p.m. ET, February 29, 2024

NOW: The House is voting on stopgap bill to avert partial shutdown at the end of the week

From CNN's Clare Foran, Kristin Wilson and Haley Talbot

The House is voting now to pass a stopgap bill that will extend government funding on a short-term basis and avert a partial shutdown at the end of the week.

Currently, Congress is confronting a pair of shutdown deadlines tomorrow and on March 8. This bill will shift the deadlines to March 8 and March 22 to give lawmakers more time to pass full-year appropriations bills. 

Once the House passes this bill, it will then go to the Senate. It’s not yet clear when the Senate will vote, but Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said he hopes it could pass his chamber as soon as Thursday evening. 

2:02 p.m. ET, February 29, 2024

House Speaker Johnson says this "should be" the final time House passes a short-term funding bill

From CNN's Haley Talbot

On his way onto the House floor, House Speaker Mike Johnson told CNN this “should be” the final time they pass a short-term funding bill. 

Yesterday, the speaker defended the move as a “process CR," or continuing resolution, after having previously vowed they were “done" with the short-term measures.

The vote is expected around 2 p.m. ET.

2:35 p.m. ET, February 29, 2024

Some House Republicans slam speaker for moving ahead with stopgap measure

From CNN's Haley Talbot

(L to R): U.S. Representatives Chip Roy (R-TX) and Matt Gaetz (R-FL).
(L to R): U.S. Representatives Chip Roy (R-TX) and Matt Gaetz (R-FL). Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images/Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters

In back-to-back fiery floor speeches, GOP Reps. Matt Gaetz and Chip Roy railed against House leadership for going ahead with the short-term continuing resolution to avert a government shutdown.

The lawmakers slammed Speaker Mike Johnson for continuing to spend money at the “Nancy Pelosi spending levels.” 

“Watching House GOP is like watching a football team whose best play is the punt and the block,” Gaetz said on the House floor. “Last I checked the Republicans actually have a majority in the House but you wouldn’t know it if you looked at our checkbook."

Gaetz urged his colleagues to reject the continuing resolution. 

Roy also lambasted leadership for “kicking the can once again" in his remarks.

12:23 p.m. ET, February 29, 2024

Johnson defends his spending deal against conservative critics ahead of expected vote this afternoon

From CNN's Lauren Fox and Avery Lotz

US Speaker of the House Mike Johnson waits to speak during a news conference after a closed-door House Republican caucus meeting on Capitol Hill today.
US Speaker of the House Mike Johnson waits to speak during a news conference after a closed-door House Republican caucus meeting on Capitol Hill today. Drew Angerer/AFP/Getty Images)

House Speaker Mike Johnson defended his position in the spending fight against conservative critics, arguing that he is trying to turn the page but that it is time to move on and focus on the next fiscal year, which he plans to do quickly.

"The appropriations process is ugly,” Johnson said. “Democracy is ugly. This is the way it works every year – always has — except that we've instituted some new innovations. We broke the omnibus fever, right? That's how Washington has been run for years. We're trying to turn the aircraft carrier back to real budgeting and spending reform. This was an important thing to break it up into smaller pieces.”

The funding bill is expected to be voted on in the House this afternoon, and then be transmitted over to the Senate. Johnson said Republicans “did have a say; they had a process” as the House worked on individual bills, but not all those bills could pass on the floor. 

“When it gets down to the final negotiation of the final revisions in each of them, that's a smaller subset of members because it's complicated and complex, but that bill text is going to be posted this weekend. All of our members will have 72 hours to review it. That's our commitment. That's our rule. We're respecting it. And that's the only reason we need the process CR (continuing resolution) to allow us time to do that. If I did it the way,” he said.

Johnson also insisted that he won’t back off his view that the border has to be more secure before he is willing to move on Ukraine aid, an issue that divides his conference and conservatives have warned could cost him his job if he moves on.   

11:10 a.m. ET, February 29, 2024

"House of hypocrites": GOP hardliners push back on Speaker Johnson after cutting spending deal

From CNN's Sam Fossum and Manu Raju

GOP hardliners are pushing back against House Speaker Mike Johnson after he cut a spending deal with Senate leaders and the White House, lashing out at the speaker’s decision to backtrack after previously pledging he would not support any additional short-term stopgap measures. 

GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, who will vote against the short-term stopgap bill, swiped at the speaker over cutting a deal with Democrats on government funding. 

“Well, I’ve kind of brought back the name House of hypocrites because our conference was all about no CRs (continuing resolutions), no CRs, no minibuses, no omnibuses. And all I heard talked about this morning was we’re on our third CR … so that we can vote on multiple minibuses,” she told CNN.

GOP Rep. Byron Donalds of Florida, who opposes the deal cut by the speaker, said it’s been “a tough six months.” And GOP Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee, who was one of the eight Republicans who voted to oust former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, said he opposed the one-week stop gap bill and broader funding deal but was sympathetic to Johnson’s circumstances.

When pressed by CNN on what policy gains they gained by ousting McCarthy, Burchett did not point to any but argued that they got increased transparency from leadership.