Lawmakers have less than 12 hours to come to an agreement to avert a government shutdown.
What's happening now?: House Republicans are meeting right now (12:30 p.m.) to discuss the new plan.
The latest plan, per Emily Brooks and Mychael Schnell's reporting: Republicans will break up elements of the government funding plan into separate, stand-alone votes. The a la carte votes would include:
- A vote to fund the government at its current levels
- A vote on disaster aid
- A vote to give economic assistance to farmers
What's notably missing from this plan: It would not include a vote to increase the debt ceiling, a source told The Hill. (Trump wanted that to be included, btw.) This plan also wouldn't include most of the proposals that were added onto the negotiated bipartisan plan from earlier this week.
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Democrats have pledged to work through Christmas: Senate Appropriations Committee Chair Patty Murray (D-Wash.) said this morning she is willing to stay in Washington "through Christmas" to fight President-elect Trump's demand to scrap the negotiated add-ons that were agreed upon in the bipartisan funding plan.
Read Alexander Bolton's reporting: 'Democrats pledge to work through Christmas on funding to rebuff Trump's demands'
What are the vibes?: CNN's Sarah Ferris says members are "getting angrier by the hour and want to leave." I feel that.
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) told The Hill's Mike Lillis this morning that he has a plan. 📹 Watch Lillis chat with Johnson as he entered the Capitol
This is a good point: Bloomberg's Steven Dennis pointed out: "A reminder that pretty much every major spending negotiation in Congress always starts with NO NO NO NO NO and always ends with YES - eventually."
Trump just added some fuel to the fire: President-elect Trump argued if there has to be a shutdown, it should happen now while President Biden is still in office. "If there is going to be a shutdown of government, let it begin now, under the Biden Administration, not after January 20th, under 'TRUMP,'" Trump posted on Truth Social. "This is a Biden problem to solve, but if Republicans can help solve it, they will!"
How plan B spectacularly failed: Johnson unveiled a pared-back plan on Thursday afternoon to fund the government, and Trump backed it. The House voted on it shortly after, but it failed to pass. Thiry-eight Republicans bucked Johnson and Trump. The 38 Republicans who voted 'no'
How are Senate Republicans feeling?: They are fuming over what they called a dysfunctional "s--- show" and "fiasco" this week as the House blew through two failed funding plans. Read Alexander Bolton's reporting on the Senate GOP's anger
Related, via The Wall Street Journal: 'How Mike Johnson's Misfires Ignited Republican Rebellion'
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