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“The first 9 pages of this Continuing Resolution are all we need to keep the government open,” Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C. “The other 1,500+ pages are a handbook on how the government plans to ...
The last-minute Continuing Resolution will fund the government until March 14, allocate about $100 billion in disaster relief and extend the farm bill. It received a total of 366 favorable votes ...
On Friday evening, the bill easily cleared the two-thirds majority needed to pass in the House by a vote of 366 to 34. Most Republicans voted in favor, except for 34 who opposed it. All Democrats ...
On September 9, with only 22 days left until funding appropriated in 2024 expired, the Continuing Appropriations and Other Matters Act, 2025 was introduced. The bill combined a continuing appropriations provision, which renewed government funding at the previous year's levels for six more months, with a voting reform measure that would have ...
Continuing Appropriations Resolution, 2017 (Pub. L. 114–223 (text)) - a continuing resolution that would fund the federal government of the United States through December 9, 2016 at 0.496% below the operating rate of the FY 2016 enacted appropriation. On September 28, 2016, the Senate voted 72-26 to pass the bill and later that day, the House ...
On May 22, the House Armed Services Committee approved its version of the 2025 National Defense Authorization Act, by a 57–1 vote. [6] As passed by the Committee, the bill included the Pentagon's controversial "Legislative Proposal 480", transferring Air National Guard space units to the Space Force; however, the Committee accepted an amendment proposed by Joe Wilson (R‑SC), watering down ...
The bill funds the government through March 14. ... we passed the American Relief Act of 2025,” House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., told reporters after the House bill passed on Friday. “This ...
The federal government is currently funded through a continuing resolution set to expire on March 15, 2025, despite the offer to pay salaries through September 30, 2025. [17] On February 5, several Democratic lawmakers sent a letter to Acting Office of Personnel Management Director Charles Ezell, describing the program as "legally dubious" and ...