US lawmakers release $2.3 trillion spending Bill to avert shutdown

The Bill covers spending through the end of fiscal 2023. PHOTO: REUTERS

WASHINGTON - US lawmakers early on Tuesday released the text of a US$1.7 trillion (S$2.30 trillion) funding Bill which Congress hopes to pass within days to avert a government shutdown.

The Bill includes US$858 billion in defence funding and will also provide US$44.9 billion in emergency assistance for Ukraine.

It also includes US$772.5 billion for non-defence discretionary programmes, including US$118.7 billion for Veterans Affairs medical care, a 22 per cent increase, and provides US$40.6 billion to help US communities hit by recent natural disasters such as hurricanes and floods.

“The pain of inflation on American families is real, and it is being felt right now across the federal government,” Senate Appropriations Chairman Patrick Leahy said in a statement announcing the release of the text of the appropriations Bill.

“From funding for nutrition programmes and housing assistance, to home energy costs and college affordability, our bipartisan, bicameral, omnibus appropriations Bill directly invests in providing relief from the burden of inflation on the American people.”

The Senate and House Appropriations Committees released the text of the Bill, which runs to 4,155 pages and covers spending through the end of fiscal 2023.

Congress last week adopted a short-term budget Bill to avert a shutdown of federal services and give the Democratic and Republican parties a little more time to reach a compromise ahead of the Dec 23 deadline.

“The choice is clear. We can either do our jobs and fund the government, or we can abandon our responsibilities without a real path forward,” Mr Leahy said.

“Passing this bipartisan, bicameral, omnibus appropriations bill is undoubtedly in the interest of the American people. It is the product of months of hard work and compromise,” the Democratic Vermont senator said.

“The House and the Senate should take up this Bill and pass it without delay.” AFP

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