Trump demands GOP unity around new spending plan
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President-elect Trump called a revised stopgap spending plan that emerged Thursday a "very good Deal for the American People" and urged lawmakers to support it.
Why it matters: The development follows 24 hours of chaos on Capitol Hill after Trump blew up a bipartisan deal at the last minute. Government funding is set to lapse this weekend.
- Trump further complicated matters Thursday when he told NBC News he supports abolishing the debt ceiling and is prepared to "lead the charge" to make it happen.
"It's a laughable proposal," House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) said in response to the bill.
- Jeffries characterized the bill as a "Trump-Musk-Johnson" proposal.
The latest version of the measure would fund the government through March, suspend the debt ceiling until January of 2027, extend the farm bill for a year and provide roughly $100 billion for disaster aid.
- Provisions increasing congressional pay, allowing the Washington Commanders football team to return to D.C. and redirecting spending on prescription drugs to health plans and pharmaceutical companies were dropped. As were restrictions on U.S. investments in China.
- GOP lawmakers said House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) was eyeing a Thursday evening floor vote on the measure.
Sources told Axios the initial plan is to bring the measure up under suspension of the rules — a process that requires a two-thirds majority for passage — before likely pivoting to consideration under a rule, which lowers the passage threshold to a simple majority.
- The Rules Committee — which would have to sign off on a simple majority passage approach — includes some staunch conservatives unlikely to agree to a two-year suspension of the debt ceiling: Reps. Chip Roy (R-Texas) and Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), for starters.
- Regardless of the outcome, the votes could give Trump visibility into which Republicans are heeding his call to line up behind a proposal he's endorsed.
The other side: Democrats are scrambling to determine how to approach the bill after spending the morning demanding Johnson stick with the original deal.
- The House Democratic caucus is meeting Thursday afternoon, according to an invite obtained by Axios, with a senior House Democrat saying the new bill is "under discussion."
- Another senior House Democrat told Axios: "Honestly if they put what they are proposing right now on the floor three weeks ago, it would've gotten a lot of votes."
But that might not be the case now: "They're asking us to take less than we had at the beginning of the week in return for a major concession, so 'laughable' is a pretty good word," Rep Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) told Axios.
Go deeper: See the bill here
Editor's note: This article has been updated with more reporting.


