[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1995, Book II)] [October 3, 1995] [Pages 1533-1534] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]Message to the House of Representatives Returning Without Approval the Legislative Branch Appropriations Bill, FY 1996 October 3, 1995 To the House of Representatives: I am returning today without my approval H.R. 1854, the ``Legislative Branch Appropriations Bill, FY 1996.'' H.R. 1854 is, in fact, a disciplined bill, one that I would sign under different circumstances. But, at this point, Congress has completed action on only two of the 13 FY 1996 appropriations bills: this one and H.R. 1817, the Military Construction appropriations bill. Thus, the vast majority of Federal activities lack final FY 1996 funding and are operating under a short-term continuing resolution. I appreciate the willingness of Congress to work with my Administration to produce an acceptable short-term continuing resolution before completing action on the regular, full-year appropriations bills for FY 1996. I believe, however, that it would be inappropriate to provide full-year regular funding for Congress and its offices while funding for most other activities of Government remains incomplete, unresolved, and uncertain. As I said two months ago, I don't think Congress should take care of its own business before it takes care of the people's business. I stated [[Page 1534]] that if the congressional leadership were to follow through on its plan to send me its own funding bill before finishing work on the rest of the budget, I would veto it. I am now following through on that commitment. I urge the Congress to move forward promptly on completing the FY 1996 appropriations bills in a form that I can accept. William J. Clinton The White House, October 3, 1995.