Leaders Consider Stopgap Spending Until December; More Ukraine Aid Likely

September 8, 2022

House and Senate leaders appear to have broad agreement about pursuing a continuing resolution to keep government spending at its current levels until mid-December, leaving the final spending decisions until the lame duck session. A continuing resolution is almost certain, since none of the 12 annual spending bills has passed both chambers with three weeks left in the fiscal year.

“We prefer to get an omnibus deal done before the end of the [calendar] year,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said, according to CQ.

Republican leaders seemed to mostly agree with the timing, but Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said Wednesday that the stopgap bill should be “as clean as possible.” His party has raised eyebrows at some items the White House has asked to include in the bill, though there is bipartisan support to include additional aid for Ukraine.

Air Force photo by Senior Airman Matt Porter

September 8, 2022

Recent News

Snap of the Week

Snap of the Week

Naval Academy plebes climb the Herndon Monument, a tradition symbolizing the successful completion of the midshipmen’s freshman year. The class of 2027 completed the climb in 2 hours, 19 minutes and 11 seconds. Navy photo by Stacy Godfrey

In Our Communities

In Our Communities

More than 74,000 residents of Whidbey Island, Washington could suffer long-term health impacts from the noise of jets stationed at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, according to a University of Washington study, The Seattle Times reported. Researchers said the impact...

$2 Billion Aid Package Will Help Ukraine Build Its Own Weapons

$2 Billion Aid Package Will Help Ukraine Build Its Own Weapons

A new $2 billion aid package the State Department announced Thursday will help build a Ukraine Defense Enterprise Program, according to Defense News. The fund will help Ukraine buy weapons from other countries while “investing in Ukraine’s defense industrial base,...

NDAA Draft Asks for DOD Study on Privatizing Barracks

NDAA Draft Asks for DOD Study on Privatizing Barracks

The House Armed Services Committee’s draft National Defense Authorization Act indicates lawmakers may not be ready to privatize more barracks, as Military.com reported. “Members aren’t completely bought into privatizing all housing,” a senior Republican committee aide...

PAST STORIES