The US Capitol building;
Credit: REUTERS/Loren Elliott
(Reuters) - On Monday 19 December 2022, negotiators in the US Congress unveiled a $1.7 trillion government funding bill, as lawmakers scrambled to pass the measure, which includes including record military spending, before temporary funding runs out at the week's end.
The total funding proposed by the bill is up from the approximately $1.5 trillion appropriated the previous year.
Leaders in the Senate and House of Representatives aimed to pass the bill and send it to Democratic President Joe Biden by the end of the week to ensure no interruptions to the government's activities. For months, Democrats and Republicans have squabbled over how much money should be spent on military and non-military programmes.
Included in the bill is $44.9 billion in additional emergency aid to Ukraine and NATO allies.
This would be on top of the record $858 billion in military spending for the year, which is up from last year's $740 billion and also exceeds Biden's request.
Democrats and Republicans alike had aimed to tuck as many legislative wish-list items as possible into the "omnibus" bill funding the government through the end of this fiscal year on 30 September 2023, without derailing the whole package.
Failure could bring a partial government shutdown beginning Saturday, two days before Christmas, and possibly lead into a months-long standoff after Republicans take control of the House on 3 January, breaking Biden's Democrats' grip on both chambers of Congress.
Negotiators worked through the weekend to put the finishing touches on the bill, which still could be amended by the full House or Senate.