A funding vote is expected to happen early in the week in hopes of avoiding a government shutdown.
The House of Representatives passed a continuing resolution Tuesday − 217-213 − in an attempt to stave off a government shutdown at the end of the week.
The resolution made it out of the chamber on mirroring partisan lines, with all but one Republican voting for it and all but one Democratic representative voting against it.
The lone GOP objection came from Kentucky representative Thomas Massie, who objected to the continued government spending in the bill, saying in a post on X that, “The CR extends the last year of Biden’s agenda at substantially the same spending levels.” In a post moments before the vote, Massie called the resolution a “stinker” that “will become obvious when the Senate Democrats vote for this.”
Massie’s objection to the bill made him a target of President Donald Trump ahead of the bill, with the party’s leader threatening to support a primary against the fiscal conservative on Truth Social.
He brushed off the threat in a statement on X ahead of the vote. “POTUS is spending his day attacking me and Canada,” Massie wrote. “The difference is Canada will eventually cave.”
The lone Democratic representative voting for the resolution was Jared Golden of Maine. Golden said in a statement after the vote that, “even a brief shutdown would introduce even more chaos and uncertainty at a time when our country can ill-afford it.”
One Democrat, Raul Grijalva of Arizona, and one Republican, Tim Moore of North Carolina, did not vote on the resolution.
The funding bill now heads to the Senate where it will need to find seven non-Republican votes to get past the filibuster, forcing the Democrats in the upper chamber to either remain united in opposition against the Trump backed plan or help the Republicans avoid a shutdown.
To see how your representatives voted, click on the state name to go directly to the state or scroll through the list below.
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