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- US Senate passes spending bill to avert shutdown
US Senate passes spending bill to avert shutdown
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The bill, which was passed by the House earlier in the week, is now headed to President Trump's desk for signing. The move was seen as a defeat for the Democrats, who had been under pressure from their own grassroots to defy Trump.
Under a shutdown, the Trump administration would have wide-ranging authority to deem whole agencies, programs and personnel nonessential, furloughing staff members with no promise they would ever be rehired.
In their typical fashion, Senate Democrats engaged in political theater to delay the inevitable and cause instability.
Americans voted for change under President Trump and Republican leadership after four years of chaos. The government is funded, let's get back to work.
I appreciate Senator Schumer, and I think he did the right thing. Really, I'm very impressed by that.
We're turning the page on four long years of corruption, weaponization and surrender to violent criminals, and we're restoring fair, equal and impartial justice under the constitutional rule of law. And you're the people that are doing it.
There could be no more heinous betrayal of American values than to use the law to terrorize the innocent and reward the wicked. That's what they were doing at a level that's never been seen before, and it's exactly what you saw with Joe Biden Merrick Garland and their cronies.
They imported illegal alien murderers, drug dealers and child predators from all over the world to come into our country, while putting elderly Christians and anti-abortion activists on trial for singing hymns and for saying prayers.
US Spending Bill
- US House passes spending bill to avert shutdown
- US government shutdown looms after Trump-backed spending deal fails to pass in House
- Government funding plan collapses as Trump vetoes bipartisan deal
sources
- 1.France 24
- 2.CNA News
- 3.The Guardian
- 4.The Times of India
- 5.Le Monde
- 6.Agence France-Presse
- 7.Associated Press
- 8.Guardian
- 9.New York Times
- 10.Reuters
perspectives
countries
organizations
- 1.Democratic Party
- 2.Republican Party
- 3.US Senate
- 4.Columbia University
- 5.Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation
- 6.White House
- 7.Federal Bureau of Investigation
- 8.SpaceX
- 9.Tesla
- 10.US Congress
persons
- 1.Donald Trump
- 2.Chuck Schumer
- 3.Elon Musk
- 4.Ted Cruz
- 5.Mahmoud Khalil
- 6.Noor Abdalla
- 7.Patty Murray
- 8.Angus King
- 9.Bernie Sanders
- 10.Brian Schatz
- 11.Catherine Cortez Masto
- 12.Chuck Grassley