[Congressional Record Volume 170, Number 39 (Tuesday, March 5, 2024)]
[Senate]
[Page S1096]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                           GOVERNMENT FUNDING

  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, now on government funding, well, it is 
the start of a busy and consequential week in Congress. Thursday 
evening, President Biden will deliver his annual State of the Union 
Address to the American people, where he will share the immense 
progress we have made as a country to bring down costs, strengthen our 
economy, and protect our country from threats around the world.
  On Friday, Congress will face another funding deadline, whereupon the 
government will start shutting down unless both Chambers work quickly, 
decisively, and with bipartisan cooperation. On that front, we are, 
thankfully, off to a very, very good start. Sunday evening, negotiators 
reached a long-sought, bipartisan and bicameral funding deal on the 
first six appropriations bills. And we did it--we passed these bills--
without devastating cuts or poison pill riders pushed by the MAGA 
right.
  It has not been easy to complete the appropriations process in a 
divided government, but after a lot of persistence, we now have six 
bills that will preserve significant investments for American families, 
for moms and children, for America's clean energy, for America's 
veterans, and more.
  It took a lot of work to make it happen. Appropriators worked through 
the entire weekend, so did my staff--so did I, in fact--and we have 
been working on this every day for months.
  The important thing now is for both Chambers to move quickly. The 
House is set to take up these appropriations bills tomorrow, where, 
hopefully, they will pass. And as soon as the House sends the 
appropriations bills over to the Senate, I will put these bills on the 
floor so we can have them on President Biden's desk before Friday's 
deadline.
  But the clock is ticking, and because of the State of the Union on 
Thursday, we need to cooperate to move extra fast to get these bills 
through. Between now and Friday, the watchwords for the Senate will be 
``cooperation'' and ``speed.''
  Now, let me take a moment to highlight some of the ways these 
appropriations bills will make a difference for the American people. 
This appropriations process--or this appropriations agreement--is a 
success in at least two ways: One, we protected almost all of the good 
investments for the American people and, two, we resisted practically 
all of the nasty riders from the MAGA right.
  To moms and kids who rely on nutrition programs, you will be taken 
care of. Despite immense opposition from the other side, this agreement 
fully funds the WIC Program, meaning no mom or kid will be denied the 
nutrition assistance they qualify for. It is exceedingly good news 
that, in divided government, we were able to keep WIC whole, and I 
thank Senator Murray for her good, hard work on this issue, as well as 
Congress Member DeLauro.
  Through this agreement, we will also protect funding to help 
Americans, especially rural Americans, to keep a roof over their head 
and afford the rent. We will increase funding for programs that support 
our veterans' health and wellbeing.
  Child nutrition, including school lunch programs, school breakfast 
programs, and summer EBT programs remain fully funded. That means we 
will be able to provide nearly 5 billion school lunches and 2\1/2\ 
billion breakfasts to kids across America next year.
  America's roads, bridges, and highways will get the funds they need 
for repairs and updates. We will be able to hire more air traffic 
controllers, food inspectors, and rail safety inspectors to keep 
Americans safe.
  We will preserve pay raises for our Federal firefighters, and we will 
strengthen funding for cutting-edge scientific research.
  I am also happy that we prevented the hard right from tainting these 
appropriations bills with devastating cuts and highly partisan policy 
riders.
  Again, we fought hard to protect funding to build more affordable 
housing and provide nutrition assistance to low-income Americans, and 
we defeated the hard right's attempts to add even more restrictions to 
women's healthcare.
  And even though the hard right tried repeatedly to undermine 
Democrats' clean energy agenda, we preserved practically all the 
progress we have made to fight climate change, while protecting 
critical jobs at the EPA.
  So I am very glad and proud we have been able to reach such a strong 
agreement under divided government.
  I thank Speaker Johnson, Leader Jeffries, Leader McConnell, 
Appropriations Committee Chair Patty Murray and Vice Chair Susan 
Collins, and all the staff who have dedicated so much work to get us to 
this point.
  This agreement gives us much needed momentum to finish the next 
package of spending bills by the March 22 deadline. Once again, it will 
only be bipartisanship--only bipartisanship--that will get us across 
the finish line, as has proven in the past. We will keep working--keep 
working--until we finish the job.

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