US Congress leaders agree on deal to avoid government shutdown

US Congress leaders agree on deal to avoid government shutdown

WASHINGTON, Jan 14 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Congressional leaders in Washington have reached a deal to keep the government funded until early March, a source familiar with the negotiations said on Saturday.
 
   Announcement of the proposal comes just before Jan 19 and Feb 2 deadlines, when federal agencies would have run out of funding in the two-tranche approach.
 
   The short-term bill, also called a continuing resolution, will keep the government open until March 1 and 8, the source said — giving lawmakers time to agree on larger budget and spending particulars.
 
   The continuing resolution will need to be passed by both houses of Congress for the country to avoid a government shutdown.
 
   Last weekend US lawmakers announced they had come to an agreement on fiscal year 2024 funding totals, establishing a roughly $1.6 trillion “topline” federal spending limit.
 
   That deal, announced by Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson and Democratic leaders in Congress, includes an increase in Pentagon spending to some $886 billion and some $773 billion for non-defense discretionary funding.
 
   Stop-gap funding measures are often used to keep the US government open amid frequent political squabbles over how to spend money and tackle rising national debt. — NNN-AGENCIES

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