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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

US averts govt shutdown one day ahead of deadline

US President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden react as they light the 2021 National Christmas Tree during a lighting ceremony on the Ellipse on Thursday in Washington, DC. - AFP
US President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden react as they light the 2021 National Christmas Tree during a lighting ceremony on the Ellipse on Thursday in Washington, DC. - AFP
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WASHINGTON: The US Congress approved a stopgap funding bill on Thursday in a rare show of cross-party unity to keep federal agencies running into 2022 and avert a costly holiday season government shutdown.


With the clock ticking down to the 11:59 pm Friday deadline, the Senate voted by 69 to 28 to keep the lights on until February 18 with a resolution that had already advanced from the House.


The "continuing resolution" avoids millions of public workers being sent home unpaid with Christmas approaching, as parks, museums and other federal properties and services closed.


"I am glad that, in the end, cooler heads prevailed -- the government will stay open," Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said.


"And I thank the members of this chamber for walking us back from the brink of an avoidable, needless and costly shutdown."


Congress watchers had expected to see the resolution getting a rough ride in the Senate, where a small group of hardline Republicans threatened to tank the measure in protest over the White House's pandemic response.


But Democrats agreed to allow a straight majority vote on defunding President Joe Biden's vaccine-or-testing mandate for large companies, which promptly failed as expected.


The right-wing Republican group, led by Utah's senior senator Mike Lee, argues that the mandate is an assault on personal liberty.


The pandemic has killed more than 780,000 people in the United States and the troubling new Omicron variant of the coronavirus has raised fears of a winter surge in cases.


But legal challenges have mounted against Biden's edict requiring vaccination or weekly tests for some sections of the US workforce, including companies with more than 100 employees.


Lee had campaigned to remove federal funding to implement the mandate and was backed by right wingers in both chambers.


Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the most senior Democrat in the House of Representatives, earlier hit out at Lee and his backers, accusing them of "defiance of science and public health."


If Congress had failed to keep the government open, the closures would have begun just after midnight on Saturday and would likely have bled into the following week.


There has never been a shutdown during a national emergency such as the pandemic, but the Congressional Budget Office estimates that the 2018-19 stoppage wiped $11 billion from the economy. - AFP


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