"Not having an agreement is simply not an option," said Rep. Kay Granger (R-TX), as only 64 Republicans voted for the bill.
Before the vote, President Donald Trump urged Republicans to back the plan, focusing on higher spending for defense.
"House Republicans should support the TWO YEAR BUDGET AGREEMENT which greatly helps our Military and our Vets. I am totally with you!" the President tweeted.
But the plan was opposed by an array of GOP conservatives who thought the bill spent too much, more liberal Democrats who objected to higher spending levels for defense, and by outside budget groups which argue Washington has given up on reining in the federal deficit.
But also very expensive is this budget deal, which essentially continues the large unpaid-for spending increases enacted last year. Discretionary spending caps will have increased 21% over Trump's term #KingofDebt pic.twitter.com/5fmTLbmKC4
— Tyler Evilsizer (@TylerEvilsizer) July 25, 2019
The #BudgetDeal will put government spending on a higher level just as permanent $1 trillion budget deficits are approaching https://t.co/qLcvyBqW1b. #Budget2019 cc @TheKuhnerReport @Brittany_J10
— CRFB.org (@BudgetHawks) July 25, 2019
House Democrats ended up supplying most of the votes for the budget deal, which was the culmination of weeks of talks between Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
“We are taking action to avoid another government shutdown, which is so harmful to meeting the needs of the American people,” Pelosi said on the House floor.
"This agreement is not perfect," said Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-OH). "Congress's top responsibility is to keep the ship of state running."
If enacted, here's how the bill would impact discretionary spending, which is about 1/3 of all government spending.
— Jennifer Shutt (@JenniferShutt) July 25, 2019
Defense discretionary
- Current (FY19): $716b
- FY20: $738b
- FY21: $740.5b
Nondefense discretionary
- Current (FY19): $605b
- FY20: $632b
- FY21: $634.5b
The plan now goes to the Senate, where a vote is expected next week, before Senators leave on an extended summer break.
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