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House votes to fund government amid shutdown threats by Senate Republicans – as it happened

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The US Capitol building.
The US Capitol building. Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA
The US Capitol building. Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA

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Key events

Today's politics recap

  • A government shutdown is still imminent. The House has passed a stopgap measure to continue funding the government through mid-February and the Senate is poised to vote on the bill tonight. Some Republican senators have threatened to oppose the bill unless an amendment is added to defund vaccine mandate efforts.
  • Joe Biden outlined the federal government’s plan to respond to the coronavirus pandemic in light of the spread of the Omicron variant, emphasizing vaccinations. The government will renew its push to get people vaccinated, including launching “hundreds of family vaccination clinics” across the country where people of all ages can get their booster shots and vaccinations.
  • Symone Sanders, chief spokesperson and senior adviser to Kamala Harris, said that she is leaving her post at the end of the year. The news has raised questions of embattlement in the vice president’s office.
  • The Biden administration is set to reintroduce the Trump-era “Remain in Mexico” policy. The policy requires those who are seeking asylum in the US to await the decision on their application outside of the US. The supreme court ruled that the federal government must reinstate the policy as it places an undue burden on states at the border.

– Lauren Aratani and Maanvi Singh

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“It is looking good” that the Senate will pass the resolution to keep the government funded through February tonight, said Senate Leader Chuck Schumer. “It’s looking very good.”

Discussions are ongoing in the Senate over an amendment to defund vaccine mandates, which Republican Senators have demanded in exchange for their support in scheduling a vote on the stopgap spending legislation. But with several Republicans missing from the Senate today, and Democrats unlikely to support the amendment, it’s almost certain to fail even if it is taken up.

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Due to certain Senate rules, all 100 senators would need to get on board to schedule a vote in order to quickly pass the stopgap spending plan before the Friday deadline.

So, a threat by even a few Republicans to oppose legislation to fund the government over objections to vaccine and testing mandates for businesses has real teeth at the moment.

Although it seems likely that a prolonged shutdown will be averted, a brief shutdown is possible as GOP Senators insist on adding an amendment barring funding for vaccine mandates. The House Freedom Caucus, a group of rightwing Republicans in the House, urged Senate colleagues to oppose the stopgap bill “unless it prohibits funding – in all respects – for the vaccine mandates and enforcement thereof”.

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House approves short-term legislation to avert government shutdown

The House voted 221 to 212 to keep the government funded through mid-February, a day before is scheduled to run out of money. Representative Adam Kinzinger was the only Republican to vote for the resolution.

U.S. House PASSES CR funding government through February 18, 2022, 221-212.

Goes now to the U.S. Senate.

Current spending authority expires Friday at Midnight ET. pic.twitter.com/HGANxhoOCF

— CSPAN (@cspan) December 2, 2021

But a shutdown is still looming, with some Senate Republicans threatening to vote against legislation to keep funding the government over the White House’s vaccine and testing mandate for employers. Some senators say they will not vote for the bill to keep the government open without an amendment barring funding for the mandate.

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Adam Gabbatt
Adam Gabbatt

In the latest attempt by the party to thwart White House efforts to increase vaccine take-up, Republicans are preparing to shut down the American government on Friday unless Democrats agree to not direct money towards enforcing a vaccine mandate for larger companies in the US.

If the disgruntled Republicans, who reportedly include Senator Mike Lee, from Utah, are successful, the government would effectively run out of money on Friday and could be forced to furlough workers and shut down some federal services.

The need for vaccine mandates, which have been introduced by Joe Biden, has taken on additional importance as the US braces for the impact of the Omicron coronavirus variant.

The plot by the right comes after some Republican states have already sought to diminish mandates, by expanding unemployment benefits for employees who have been fired or quit over the requirement to get the vaccine.

On Wednesday, the House Freedom Caucus, a group of rightwing Republicans in the House of Representatives, urged their Senate colleagues to block the funding bill, also known as a continuing resolution, “unless it prohibits funding – in all respects – for the vaccine mandates and enforcement thereof”.

In a letter to Mitch McConnell, the Senate minority leader, the Freedom Caucus said the Democratic-dominated House was set to vote in favor of the stopgap funding bill on Wednesday. The bill will then go to the Senate, where Democrats need Republican votes to pass the bill by Friday night.

The House Freedom Caucus said that deadline gave their Senate colleagues “important leverage” to prevent funding for mandates.

Biden introduced vaccine mandates, which require employees to be vaccinated or submit to weekly testing, for federal workers and contractors in July. In September, Biden ordered healthcare workers to be vaccinated and companies with 100 workers or more to require Covid-19 vaccines or testing, which the government said would cover more than 100 million employees. Those measures have been put on hold by court rulings, after Republican state attorneys general, conservative groups and trade organizations have sued to stop the regulations.

The appeal by House Republicans came after Politico reported that some Republicans in the Senate were open to blocking the stopgap funding bill.

“I’m sure we would all like to simplify the process for resolving the [continuing resolution], but I can’t facilitate that without addressing the vaccine mandates,” Lee told Politico.

Read more:

Today so far

Here’s a quick summary of what’s happened so far today:

  • A government shutdown is still imminent as leaders in Congress struggled today to agree on a bipartisan stopgap measure. House leaders said they had reached an agreement on a bill that would extend current government spending levels until mid-February, though the House has yet to vote on the bill. Some Republican Senators are saying they will not agree to a stopgap bill unless Democrats agree to defund enforcement of the federal vaccine mandate.
  • Joe Biden gave remarks on new actions the federal government is taking to address the pandemic, including expanding access to boosters for Americans and launching a new campaign to encourage people to get their booster shots.
  • Symone Sanders, chief spokesperson and senior adviser to Kamala Harris, said that she is leaving her post at the end of the year, further prompting questions of embattlement in the vice president’s office.
  • The Biden administration is set to reintroduce a Trump-era policy that requires those who are seeking asylum in the US to await the decision on their application outside of the US. The supreme court ruled that the federal government must reinstate the policy as it places an undue burden on states at the border.

Stay tuned for more live updates.

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Donald Trump is asking a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit against him filed by writer E Jean Carroll, who has accused the former president of sexual assault, on the ground of a state law meant to protect free speech, according to the Washington Post.

The law allows for the quick dismissal of lawsuits against wealthy companies and people if they can prove the claims against them have no substantial basis. If a lawsuit is dismissed under this law, the person who brought forth the lawsuit must pay the defendant’s legal fees.

Carroll has sued Trump for defamation in 2019 after Trump said that she made up her sexual assault accusation to sell her new book.

Roberta Kaplan, Carroll’s attorney, said in a statement that Trumps’ request is a “transparent effort to delay” the lawsuit from going to court.

Two former Georgia election workers are suing a far-right conspiracy website for defamation saying that the site knowingly published false stories about them, which led to harassment and threats.

The lawsuit, which was filed on Thursday, says that Gateway Pundit published multiple false stories about them after a Trump attorney said at a hearing in George that he saw a video of several poll workers stuffing ballots from suitcases under a table. He gave the first name of one of the women – Ruby Freeman – which ultimately led to targeting reporting from Gateway Pundit, the women allege. Freeman is joined in the lawsuit by her daughter, Shaye Moss, who is also accusing the site of defamation.

The women say that the false stories “have not only devastated their personal and professional reputations but instigated a deluge of intimidation, harassment and threats that has forced them to change their phone numbers, delete their online accounts and fear for their physical safety.”

The suit says that the FBI recommended Freeman leave her home for two months because of threats.

A Minnesota man who traveled to New York City and attended an anime convention has tested positive for the Omicron variant, New York governor Kathy Hochul said earlier today. This is the second confirmed case of the variant in the US.

The convention was held in mid-November and took place in the city’s main convention center. Hochul said the state is anticipating more cases though “this is not a cause for alarm”.

New York City mayor Bill de Blasio also said that there will likely be community spread and that the city will reach out to conference attendees to be tested.

The Republican governor of Missouri commissioned an analysis of whether mask mandates helped to save lives and prevent Covid-19 in the state but never made the findings of the analysis public, according to the Kansas City Star.

The analysis was conducted in early November, but its findings were not made public until news outlets made a public records request for the results. The study found that mask mandates in the state’s largest cities were effective in helping to prevent higher Covid-19 cases.

Mask mandates have been a controversial issue in Missouri, with the state’s governor Mike Parson criticizing them and conflicts within local jurisdictions over mandates happening across the state.

Georgia governor Brian Kemp is already taking pointed jabs at Stacey Abrams, who announced yesterday she will be running for governor next year.

In a tweet thread yesterday, Kemp criticized Abrams’ “far-left agenda” and said that she hurt the state because of her “ultimate ambition of becoming president”.

Kemp spoke on Abrams again today saying that her announcement is “a rallying point for Republicans. Because we know it’s not just the Georgia radicals we’re facing. It’s going to be the Hollywood crowd and everyone else flooding money in here.”

.@GovKemp says he welcomes the fight against Abrams. “It’s a rallying point for Republicans. Because we know it’s not just the Georgia radicals we’re facing. It’s going to be the Hollywood crowd and everyone else flooding money in here.” #gapol pic.twitter.com/aN24FzYPYW

— Greg Bluestein (@bluestein) December 2, 2021

Republicans in the Senate swiftly blocked an attempt to get universal background checks on the table following Tuesday’s school shooting in Michigan.

“I hope many of my colleagues took a minute to watch cell phone video from the school shooting in Michigan,” Democratic senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut said on the Senate floor. “Absolutely terrifying watching children fleeing their classroom in fear that their lives were about to be ended.”

WATCH: Sen. @ChrisMurphyCT complete remarks on #GunViolence and Background Checks pic.twitter.com/j535dwZjud

— CSPAN (@cspan) December 2, 2021

Murphy pushed forward the bill that passed the House in March that expands background checks to allow an expanded 10-day review for gun purchases and transfers.

Chuck Grassley, speaking in opposition of the bill, said on the Senate floor that the background checks “will not prevent crime and will turn otherwise law-abiding citizens into criminals.”

As Joe Biden was walking off the stage after delivering his remarks on the federal government’s new actions to address the pandemic, he responded to a question on the squabble in Congress over the impending government shutdown.

“I don’t believe that will happen,” Biden told reporters. “There’s a plan in place unless someone decides to be totally erratic.”

Will there be a government shutdown on Friday? “No,” President Biden says. “There’s a plan in place unless someone decides to be totally erratic.”

— Jennifer Epstein (@jeneps) December 2, 2021

Joe Biden outlines new federal actions to address coronavirus

Joe Biden just delivered a speech at the National Institute of Health outlining the federal government’s plan to respond to the coronavirus pandemic in light of the spread of the Omicron variant.

“We’re going to fight this variant with science and speed, not chaos and confusion,” Biden said.

Biden laid out five key points of the plan that emphasizes vaccines. The federal government will renew its push to get people vaccinated, including launching “hundreds of family vaccination clinics” across the country where people of all ages can get their booster shots and vaccinations. There will also be a national campaign encouraging the over 100m people who are eligible for booster shots but have not gotten theirs to get their shots. He also called on employers to provide paid time off to employees to get their booster shots.

Biden also said that the mask mandates on airplanes, buses and trains as well as airports and stations will continue through March. At-home coronavirus tests will be reimbursed for those who have private insurance, while the government will distribute 15m tests to community health centers and rural clinics to get tests to those uninsured or who are on Medicaid.

Today so far

Here’s a quick summary of what has happened today so far:

  • House leaders have reached an agreement on a stopgap bill that would extend current government spending levels until mid-February. Now it’s up to the Senate to prevent a government shutdown from happening at Friday at midnight by passing their own stopgap measure.
  • Symone Sanders, chief spokesperson and senior adviser to Kamala Harris, said that she is leaving her post at the end of the year, further prompting questions of embattlement in the vice president’s office.
  • The Biden administration is set to reintroduce a Trump-era policy that requires those who are seeking asylum in the US to await the decision on their application outside of the US. The Supreme Court ruled that the federal government must reinstate the policy as it places an undue burden on states at the border.

Joe Biden is set to announce his plans for federal action to address the pandemic in light of the Omicron variant, so stay tuned for more live updates.

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Republican senator Mike Lee is speaking on the Senate floor on Republican’s threat to cause a government shutdown if Democrats don’t agree to defund the federal vaccine mandate.

Lee is saying that he wants a vote on his amendment to defund the mandate.

GOP UT Sen Mike Lee on vaccine mandate/gov't shutdown: I just want a vote on one amendment. I want the members of this body to go on record on whether they support funding in this bill for President Biden’s vaccine amendment.

— Chad Pergram (@ChadPergram) December 2, 2021

It is unclear whether Lee has the support of all his fellow Republicans, with Mitch McConnell saying earlier today that he is not a fan of holding up government funding to fight the mandate.

Insiders in Washington are paying close attention to the trip Kamala Harris and transportation secretary Pete Buttigieg are taking to North Carolina together. Why? Because of a purported rivalry between the two because of their similar presidential ambitions. Here’s more from the LA Times:

Donna Brazile calls the purported rivalry between Vice President Kamala Harris and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg “gossip” and “manufactured BS.”

“With an emphasis on the B and the S,” added Brazile, a former Democratic Party chief and current confidant to Harris.

Alas, Washington is a town that thrives on hypotheticals, intrigue and — yes — gossip. So, no matter how many times people like Brazile try to bat it down, the speculation persists.

Here is the theory: The pair of bold names in the Biden administration are vying to be next in line for the party’s nomination, either in 2024 should President Biden, the oldest president in U.S. history at 79, step aside — or in 2028 if he runs again.

Thursday, the two protagonists in this latest Beltway drama will hit the road together. Anyone hoping for a riveting oratorical showdown in Charlotte, N.C., will have to settle for speeches about potholes and rural broadband access. The topic of the day is infrastructure.

But rest assured, television analysts will provide authoritative takes on their body language as they tour the Charlotte Area Transit System Bus and Light Rail Garage. Some may note who speaks most passionately about the nation’s deteriorating bridges or who fails to capture the excitement of bus rapid transit lanes.

“I’m sure that it will be dissected aplenty,” said Elaine Kamarck, a former aide to Vice President Al Gore who researches the presidential nominating process at the Brookings Institution think tank. “Whether it means anything is anybody’s guess.”

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