Thursday, November 7, 2024

Agreement reached in US budget dispute

by Dispatches
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Agreement reached in US Budget Dispute

For months, Democrats and Republicans have been engaged in a dispute over the budget. Now, the US Congress has reached a compromise. However, not everyone is satisfied with the agreement, and the threat of a government shutdown remains.

The leading representatives of the Democrats and Republicans in the US Congress have reached a fundamental agreement in the budget dispute. The compromise, announced on Sunday after weeks of negotiations, aims to prevent a budgetary impasse, known as a “shutdown.”

The agreement sets a spending cap of approximately $1.6 trillion for the fiscal year 2024, as stated by Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson and Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer. This includes $886 billion for defense and $704 billion for other expenditures. However, two prominent Democrats, Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries, estimate non-defense spending to be $772.7 billion, nearly $69 billion higher than Johnson’s figure. Non-defense spending aims to protect important domestic priorities such as veteran benefits, healthcare, and food subsidies from cuts.

Not all Republicans are satisfied with the compromise. US President Joe Biden stated that the agreement brings the country closer to “preventing an unnecessary government shutdown and protecting vital national priorities.” Republican Johnson said that “the final expenditures will not satisfy everyone and won’t reduce spending as much as many of us would like.”

The compromise is likely to upset the far-right wing of the Republican party in the House of Representatives, whose representatives advocate for austerity measures. The conservative Republican group, House Freedom Caucus, criticized the budget agreement on the social media platform X as a “total failure.” Republican hardliner Chip Roy described the agreed-upon spending framework as “terrible.”

Democrats and Republicans must now negotiate further details in Congress and pass a law by January 19. Otherwise, funding for a portion of government operations would expire.

 

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