Members are back in their districts/states for the August recess, but when they return in September they face a pretty daunting “to do” list with only 12 legislative days to complete some of the items on the list. Raising the debt ceiling to avoid default while simultaneously approving a spending deal to avert a government shutdown will be hefty lifts for Republican leadership. And all of this comes on the heels of failing to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”) so there is pressure on GOP leaders to demonstrate an ability to deliver on some campaign promises while they control both the Executive and Legislative branches of government.
FY18 Appropriations
The FY18 spending bills need to be passed and signed into law by September 30, or Congress needs to pass a continuing resolution (CR) before then in order to avoid a government shutdown. Deep rifts over spending priorities could lead to a shutdown, but the more likely scenario is a short-term CR extending funding for the government for a few months, possibly through mid-December, at current funding levels. The CR could also include must-pass items such as a reauthorization of the Children’s Health Insurance Program and a raise in the debt limit.
The House Rules Committee posted a notice to members on its website this week informing them that they intend to take up the eight remaining FY18 appropriations bills in a single bill when they return from recess in September. They are likely to take up the bill the first week when they return. House Rules Committee Chairman Pete Sessions (R-TX) said that the committee will issue a deadline for amendment submission prior to the end of the August recess. The eight remaining bills are likely to be combined on the floor with the “security-bus” the House passed before the recess, effectively creating an FY18 omnibus spending bill. While the eight new bills will be subject to a limited number of amendments during floor consideration in September, the four bills already passed by the House would not be amended. Even though the House could potentially finish all of their FY18 spending bills before the end of the fiscal year, many members and staff still anticipated needing a CR to avoid a shutdown at the end of September. And if the House FY18 omnibus bill were enacted into law, the topline spending level of $1.13T and the defense discretionary spending level would break the caps set by the Budget Control Act of 2011 (BCA) triggering automatic spending cuts, or sequestration.
There are about a dozen conservatives in the House who won’t vote for most spending bills and also don’t want to increase the debt ceiling without corresponding spending cuts. That means that Republicans will need support from Democrats to both raise the debt ceiling and keep the government funded. Democrats will require a spending deal in return for their votes. The White House is pushing a deal that would lift the caps set by the Budget Control Act of 2011 in return for funding for the President’s proposed border wall with Mexico.
Status of FY18 Appropriations Spending Bills
Subcommittee | House Action | Senate Action |
Agriculture | Subcommittee: June 28
Full Committee: July 12 |
Subcommittee: July 19
Full Committee: July 20 |
Commerce Justice Science | Subcommittee: June 29
Full Committee: July 13 |
Subcommittee: July 25
Full Committee: July 27 |
Defense | Subcommittee: June 26
Full Committee: June 29 Floor: July 27 |
|
Energy & Water | Subcommittee: June 28
Full Committee: July 12 Floor: July 27 |
Subcommittee: July 19
Full Committee: July 20 |
Financial Services | Subcommittee: June 29
Full Committee: July 13 |
|
Homeland Security | Subcommittee: July 12
Full Committee: July 18 |
|
Interior | Subcommittee: July 12
Full Committee: July 18 |
|
Labor HHS | Subcommittee: July 13
Full Committee: July 19 |
|
Legislative Branch | Full Committee: June 29
Floor: July 27 |
|
MilCon-VA | Subcommittee: June 12
Full Committee: June 15 Floor: July 27 |
Subcommittee: July 12
Full Committee: July 13 |
State Foreign Ops | Subcommittee: July 13
Full Committee: July 19 |
|
Transportation HUD | Subcommittee: July 11
Full Committee: July 17 |
Subcommittee: July 25
Full Committee: July 27 |
Debt Ceiling
The debt ceiling is currently at the limit of $19.8T. The previous extension of the debt limit expired on March 15, and the Treasury Department has been using “extraordinary measures” to continue paying the nation’s bills since then. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has set a deadline of September 29 for Congress to raise the debt ceiling.
Health Care Reform
While Congressional Republicans want to use the August recess to talk about tax reform, their constituents are pressing them to stay focused on healthcare. Republicans are divided over whether to give up on health care reform or to continue the battle while also pursuing changes to the tax code. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said this week that there is a change the Senate could revive the measure to repeal and replace “Obamacare,” but acknowledged that the window for that is rapidly closing. McConnell noted that Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Chairman Lamar Alexander (R-TN) is working on a bipartisan approach that would involve subsidies for insurance companies. But he cautioned that Democrats would have to support some “real reforms” in the measure so that it isn’t just an insurance company bailout.
Tax Reform
Republican leaders announced last month that they plan to start hearings on a tax bill in September with the hope of holding a House vote in October and a Senate one in November. White House Director of Legislative Affairs, Marc Short reiterated that timeline this week when he said that the Trump Administration sees a bill to overhaul the tax code passing the House in October and being cleared by the Senate the following month. But this week Senate Majority Leader McConnell refused to put a timeline on tax reform. Learning from his experience with deadline for repealing Obamacare, McConnell is concerned about setting artificial deadlines that are “unrelated to the reality of the complexity of legislating.”
In order to move forward with tax reform, the House and Senate have to pass an FY18 budget resolution with reconciliation instructions that will prevent Democrats from filibustering their legislation in the Senate. House Republicans have been divided over their FY18 budget resolution and were unable to pass the measure before they left for the August recess. The Senate has yet to do an FY18 budget resolution. And the looming deadlines to fund the government and raise the debt ceiling in the tight House and Senate September floor schedules doesn’t leave much time for consideration of FY18 budget resolutions on the floor.
The biggest problem for Republicans is agreeing on the scope of their potential tax package. An increasing number of Republicans want to scale back the goal of comprehensive reform in favor of narrower tax cuts as they view the latter as more achievable. Others, like Senate Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch (R-UT), House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-WI), and the White House, are still calling for comprehensive tax reform. Some Republicans are also calling for parts of the tax-reform package to be retroactive having some changes take effect as early as January 2017. This would add to the cost of tax reform and lawmakers would need to find more ways to pay for those retroactive cuts. In the end, Republicans may have to settle for a simple tax cut rather than a sweeping overhaul like some had imagined.