
Illustration: Annelise Capossela/Axios
The bipartisan spending agreement's demise leaves an uncertain path to funding the government by Friday and likely dooms hundreds of pages of year-end policy agreements.
Why it matters: The CR agreement was carrying legislation to allow year-round sales of high ethanol fuel, as well as disaster relief and aid for farmers.
Driving the news: Republican leadership may now try to move a clean CR that extends spending through mid-March and perhaps includes disaster relief.
- But President-elect Trump is demanding that Congress pass a debt-limit bill — which wasn't part of initial CR negotiations — on "Biden's watch."
Between the lines: The original deal would have allowed year-round sales of E15, a major priority for Midwestern lawmakers and the ethanol industry.
- E15 is blended with 10.5% to 15% ethanol, but under current law, it's often not sold in the summer to limit smog.
What's next: We'll keep you posted on where things go from here as Congress barrels towards a holiday shutdown.
