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Trump’s funding plan rejected by US House of Representatives

Democrats refused to accommodate President-elect Donald Trump’s sudden demands and the quick fix cobbled together by Republican leaders on Thursday.

By contributor By Lisa Mascaro and Kevin Freking, Associated Press
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Speaker of the House Mike Johnson talks briefly to reporters just before the vote on an amended interim spending bill
Speaker of the House Mike Johnson talks briefly to reporters just before the vote on an amended interim spending bill (J Scott Applewhite/AP)

The House of Representatives has rejected President-elect Donald Trump’s new plan to fund federal operations and suspend the debt ceiling a day before a government shutdown.

Democrats refused to accommodate Mr Trump’s sudden demands and the quick fix cobbled together by Republican leaders on Thursday.

In a hastily convened evening vote punctuated by angry outbursts over the self-made crisis, House members failed to reach the two-thirds threshold needed for passage — but House Speaker Mike Johnson appeared determined to try again before Friday’s midnight deadline.

“We’re going to do the right thing here,” Mr Johnson said ahead of the vote, which ended with the bill failing 174-235.

The outcome proved a massive setback for Mr Trump and his billionaire ally, Elon Musk, who rampaged against Mr Johnson’s bipartisan compromise, which Republicans and Democrats had reached earlier to prevent a Christmastime government shutdown.

It provides a preview of the turbulence ahead when Mr Trump returns to the White House with Republican control of the House and Senate.

During his first term, Mr Trump led Republicans into the longest government shutdown in history during the 2018 Christmas season and interrupted the holidays in 2020 by tanking a bipartisan Covid-relief bill and forcing a second attempt.

Hours earlier, Mr Trump announced “SUCCESS in Washington!” in coming up with the new package which would keep government running for three more months, add 100.4 billion dollars (£80.3 billion) in disaster assistance, including for hurricane-hit states, and allow more borrowing until January 30, 2027.

“Speaker Mike Johnson and the House have come to a very good Deal,” Mr Trump posted.

But Republicans, who had spent 24 hours largely negotiating with themselves to come up with the new plan, ran into a wall of resistance from Democrats, who were in no hurry to appease demands from Mr Trump — or his billionaire ally Mr Musk.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (Mark Schiefelbein/AP)

House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries said Democrats were sticking with the original deal with Mr Johnson and called the new one “laughable.”

“It’s not a serious proposal,” Mr Jeffries said as he walked to the Democrats’ own closed-door caucus meeting. Inside, Democrats were chanting, “Hell, no!”

All day, Mr Johnson had been fighting to figure out how to meet Trump’s sudden demands — and keep his own job — while federal offices are being told to prepare to shutter operations.

The new proposal whittled the 1,500-page bill to 116 pages and drops a number of add-ons — notably the first pay raise for politicians in more than a decade, which could have allowed as much as a 3.8% bump. That drew particular scorn as Mr Musk turned his social media army against the bill.

Mr Trump said earlier Thursday that Mr Johnson will “easily remain speaker” for the next Congress if he “acts decisively and tough” in coming up with a new plan to also raise the debt limit, a stunning request just before the Christmas holidays that has put the beleaguered speaker in a bind.

And if not, the president-elect warned of trouble ahead for Mr Johnson and Republicans in Congress.

“Anybody that supports a bill that doesn’t take care of the Democrat quicks and known as the debt ceiling should be primaried and disposed of as quickly as possible,” Mr Trump told Fox News Digital.

The tumultuous turn of events, coming as lawmakers were preparing to head home for the holidays, sparks a familiar reminder of what it’s like in Trump-run Washington.

For Mr Johnson, who faces his own problems ahead of a January 3 House vote to remain speaker, Mr Trump’s demands left him severely weakened, forced to abandon his word with Democrats and work into the night to broker the new approach.

Mr Trump’s allies even floated the far-fetched idea of giving Mr Musk the speaker’s gavel, since the speaker is not required to be a member of the Congress. Georgia Representative Majorie Taylor Greene posted she was “open” to the idea.

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