Taken
from POLITICO
MAGAZINE
House passes $1.1 trillion spending bill after week of drama
By
JAKE SHERMAN, JHN BRESHAN AND EDARD-ISAAC DOVERE
In a big win for House Republicans and President
Barack Obama, the House passed a $1 trillion-plus funding bill Thursday night
that will keep the government open into next year.
The final vote, which came after a high drama
day of behind the scenes arm twisting and vote counting, was 219 to 206.
The Senate passed a two-day funding bill
following the House vote, avoiding a government shutdown starting at midnight
Thursday. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), however, warned that the
“cromnibus,” as the massive spending package has come to be called on Capitol
Hill, may not pass the Senate until Monday.
After a lobbying blitz by Obama, Vice President
Joe Biden, and other White House officials, dozens of House Democrats broke
with Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and backed the legislation,
despite controversial provisions on Wall Street and campaign finance.
Thursday’s results were a major blow to Pelosi,
who had led Democrats in hours long closed-door meeting where they bashed the
bill and counted on its defeat to help her recover politically f0llowing the
Democratic debacle on Election Day. But 57 Democrats crossed the aisle to vote with
162 Republicans to help pass the measure, undermining Pelosi’s hardline stance.
In a major split with Pelosi - the second such
public division in recent weeks - Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) backed the
legislation. Hoyer quietly lobbied other Democratic moderates and
Appropriations Committee members to line up behind the bill, and in the end, he
proved to Republicans, Senate Democrats, and the White House that he could
deliver the votes, at least in this case.
Other Democratic defections included Reps. Jim
Clyburn (S.C.), the number three House Democrat, and Nita Lowey (N.Y.), ranking
member on the Appropriations Committee, who helped negotiate the 1,600 page
deal.
Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.), another Pelosi
ally, voted for the spending package after a provision on multi-employer
pensions that he strongly backed was included in the legislation.
The vote was also a big win for Boehner,
Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and Majority Whip Steve Scalise
(R-La.). Scalise’s whip operation was under heavy pressure on this vote, and he
was able to keep members in line despite a long delay in the final vote. Sixty
seven Republicans ended up opposing the bill.
“The House did its work and tonight we set the
stage for a battle with the president on this illegal actions on immigration
when we have a Republican Senate in just a few weeks,” Scalise said after the
House passed the long-term funding legislation.
The dramatic finale came after a day of
scrambling by House Republicans and Obama, who was trying to convince undecided
Democrats to vote for the nine-month spending bill with just a few hours to
spare before a government shutdown.
With the spending bill in limbo Thursday
evening, Obama and Biden were personally calling House Democrats urging them to
support the bill — even as many liberals resisted, complaining about policy
riders, especially one that rolled back a major Wall Street regulation that is
part of the Dodd-Frank law.
White House chief of staff Denis McDonough
traveled to Capitol Hill in an attempt to convince Democrats to support Obama
and the omnibus. House Republican leaders - and Senate Democrats - were
cautiously confident that the president could turn the votes for the nine-month
funding bill, which Obama was able to do.
McDonough made an aggressive pitch to pass the
omnibus to put more certainty into the economy, arguing that the federal
government cannot afford to continually operate on short-term continuing
resolutions, according to Democrats leaving the meeting.
But one Democrat said there was ample
frustration from members over why such provisions over campaign finance and
financial services were added in “the dead of night.”
“We want answers,” the Democrat said.
McDonough said the president was also concerned
with those provisions.
The calls from the White House came as the
House went into recess Thursday afternoon, with Republicans and Democrats
trying to cobble together 217 votes to put government spending on autopilot
until September 2015. House Republicans believed they had picked up some votes
as the day has worn on, giving them a cushion for a potential vote. And in the
Democratic caucus meeting, McDonough made the argument that Democrats will have
less leverage if they back a shorter term deal that expires when Republicans
control the Senate.
The chamber recessed shortly after 2 p.m.
Thursday to figure out whether members could garner support for the larger deal
or would need to pass a pared-back measure to avoid the second shutdown of the
113th Congress.
Boeher, McCarthy and Scalise were also twisting
Republican arms to garner more votes, and the White House had surrogates
calling Capitol Hill to drum up Democratic support. Republicans said they were
making gains Thursday afternoon, but Democratic support was still flagging.
Pelosi firmly against the bill due to the
loosening of Wall Street regulations that was tucked inside the legislation. It
has angered many on the left and even Obama, who supports the package but
opposes that element.
Obama late Thursday announced his support for
the bill at a critical time for the 1,600-page package, which just narrowly
cleared a procedural hurdle in the House on Thursday.
“The Administration appreciates the bipartisan
effort to include full-year appropriations legislation for most Government
functions that allows for planning and provides certainty, while making
progress toward appropriately investing in economic growth and opportunity, and
adequately funding national security requirements,” a White House statement
read.
Despite the White House’s stance, Pelosi
remained firmly against the bill throughout the day, saying, “It is clear from
this recess on the floor that the Republicans don’t have enough votes to pass
the cromnibus,” Pelosi declared in a letter to Democrats, convinced she was
winning the fight. This increases our leverage to get two offensive provisions
of the bill removed: the bank bailout and big money for campaigns provision.”
“However you decide to vote in the end, I thank
those who continue to give us leverage to improve the bill,” Pelosi added.
- Manu Raju, Lauren French and Seung Min Kim contributed to this report.