The Republicans ready to fight for the murderers before the deadline for closing the government

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The Republicans of Congress face a difficult battle in the next two months to keep their promises to reduce expenses in the next financial year – while avoiding partial closure of the government if no agreement is concluded.
“When will we go back the last time we really got 12 credits invoices and finished in a few weeks? It’s almost impossible to do,” said last week Rich McCormick, R-GA.
Adopting 12 bills of individual credits, each financing of distinct aspects of the federal government, was the objective of the Republicans each time the deadline for the financial year (FY) of September 30.
But that has not occurred since 1996 – FY1997 – and the partisan environment in Washington has not become more polarized since. The recent legislation supported by the Republicans has almost sidelined the former-powerful credit committees in the two chambers.
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The head of the majority of the Senate John Thune and the president of the Mike Johnson room must now work to avoid a closure of the government at the end of the exercise. (AP; Getty; Fox News Digital)
Meanwhile, the House Republicans are more broadly eager to comply with the Trump administration’s demand to reduce $ 163 billion in non -defensive public spending than their senate counterparts – which could cause confrontation between the two chambers.
“It seems that it is higher than the president’s budget.
Another republican committee, representative Riley Moore, RW.VA., said: “I am really proud of the work that the committee has done so far. I have the impression of being able to do these bills. The question is, what will the Senate do?”
Other difficulties in composition between the two sides of the American Capitol are the 60 -voting filibuster threshold than most bills in the Senate must travel.
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This means that all spending bills must be bipartite, but after the Senate Republicans have advanced the $ 9 billion pack of President Donald Trump, the Senate Democrats have warned that they will not play in the ball.
The head of the majority of the Senate, John Thune, RS.D., said that he would like to go ahead with a regular process of credits, but that the Democrats of the Senate “pointed out that they did not want them”.
“The Democrats were very clear,” he said. “They already give the idea of a government closure – I have no idea, no idea how it is useful to them or for anyone.”
The majority leader in the Senate, Chuck Schumer, Dn.y., previously warned that if the Republicans succeeded in passing the cancellation package – after having slipped the Democrats during the budgetary reconciliation process – that there could be problems on the road to generate sufficient bipartisan support to adopt expense bills, nevertheless a partial closure of the government.

The head of the Senate minority, Chuck Schumer, warned that Democrats could make the Republicans difficult to adopt their spending bills. (Kayla Bartkowski / Getty Images)
Senator John Hoeven, President of Senate Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration and the Sub-Comeding of Related Agency credits, Fox News Digital told only if the Democrats planned to block everything, then “would you expect?”
“By working with us, this is how they will really get some of their priorities,” said the Northern Dakota Republican. “But when they are just going to block us, so why should their priorities be included?”
A member of the Chamber’s credit committee who spoke with Fox News Digital on condition of anonymity said that republican legislators are starting to accept the possibility of a short -term continuous resolution (CR), a Stopgap measure extending the finance levels for the previous year in order to keep the government open.
“You might see a situation where you are in a short -term CR, and we will try to negotiate line numbers and all of this,” said the chamber legislator.
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This is a situation that the president of the Credit Committee of the Chamber, Tom Cole, R -Okla., Did not exclude journalists at the beginning of last week – while agreeing with the concerns of the Republicans of the Senate concerning the Democrats who do not work in the aisle.
“I am still worried about a closure, because I think that the Democrats have trouble negotiating with Donald Trump. I mean, that is why we ended up in a CR,” said Cole, referring to the last round of government funding talks that resulted in a Mars CR at the end of FY2025.
“We offered them a much better deal than CR, and they could not do it. So I hope this time, but the temperature on the other side is very high, and democratic voters would punish their own members for cooperating on things like keeping the government open.”

The president of the Chamber’s credit committee Tom Cole expressed his concern in the face of a government closure, citing concerns with the Democrats. (Getty Images)
This could, however, create a problem with the members of the Conservative House Freedom Caucus, who have fiercely pushed the CRS or the “omnibus” expenditure invoices in the past – although no dead end of this type has resulted in recent years.
The Republicans of the Chamber and the Senate are faced with thin razor margins of only three votes.
The House Republicans won a major victory last week by adopting their defense financing bill of $ 832 billion. This, as well as the bill funding military construction and the affairs of veterans, represent more than half of the discretionary budget requested by the White House earlier this year.
But it is not expected that the votes at the house level be on one of the 10 bills remaining before the beginning of September, when the congress returns from the recess of August.
The Senate Republicans are also preparing to consider their first bill of expenditure, for military construction and the VA, Tuesday which will probably end up being a test of the way in which the credits process, and probably an extension of government financing, will take place in the coming months.
Senator Patty Murray, the main democrat of the Senate credits committee, said that after the cancellation package had adopted that she wanted to see the panel to find himself in shape and, in doing so, keeping the bipartite spirit of life.

President Donald Trump wants republican legislators to reduce defenseless spending. (AP photo / Alex Brandon)
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“It is regrettable that many members of this organization voted to make it much more difficult,” said Washington’s state democrat.
A GOP legislator of the senior chamber which spoke with Fox News Digital finally minimized the concerns of a closure.
“The factors of the Senate wanted more money than the Chamber, the Democrats who want more money than the Republicans – these have been in place for a generation. And most of the time, the closures do not occur,” said the legislator.
“It seems to me that although the Democrats are great crazy about Elon and Trump, and reconciliation, at one point, this temperature will fade and that people will realize that a stop does not really serve our national interests.”