The Senate on Thursday approved a $1.7 trillion spending bill with help from more than a dozen Republican lawmakers, after a fight over immigration policy nearly derailed the legislation.
In an 68-29 vote, the Senate passed a bill that provides $858 billion for defense, $787 billion for non-defense domestic programs and nearly $45 billion for military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine. The more than 4,000-page bill funds the government for the rest of the fiscal year, and includes more than 7,200 earmarks totaling more than $15 billion.
Senate passage sends the bill to the House, where Speaker Nancy Pelosi is expected to hold a vote as early as Thursday evening in order to let lawmakers depart for the Christmas holiday.
"The bill is so important to get done because it will be good for families, for veterans, our national security, even for the health of our democratic institutions," said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.
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Although only a majority vote was needed, a handful of Republicans voted with every single Senate Democrat to pass the bill. Republican support was slightly lower than the 21 GOP votes the measure garnered earlier this week to overcome the Senate's 60-vote filibuster threshold.
While both parties negotiated the bill in the Senate, the spending bill generated significant opposition from Republicans.
Several Senate Republicans even mounted a last-minute push the block the measure in the lead-up to the final vote. Arguing that a GOP-controlled House could exact larger concessions from Biden and come January, the Republicans sought to amend the bill in ways that Democrats said would make it impossible to pass in the House.
"Senate Republicans should instead support a short-term spending bill, allowing the new Congress — with the incoming Republican House — to start the spending process over again in January," said Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah.
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Late Wednesday, the bill was almost derailed by a Republican push to add immigration language. In exchange for agreeing to speed up the vote process, Lee wanted for a vote to maintain a Trump-era immigration policy in place that has prevented millions of immigrants from entering the United States. That so-called Title 42 policy, which was invoked during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, allows immigration to be curtailed for public health reasons.
Lee and GOP senators hoped that a simple-majority vote on the amendment keeping Title 42 in place would win the support of enough red state Democrats to pass.
Lee's demand froze the Senate for several hours, and Lee accused Democrats of dodging the issue because the measure might easily pass. While popular with some moderate Democrats, the Title 42 policy is widely opposed by progressives in the House and would have likely tanked the bill.
By Thursday morning, Schumer agreed to give Lee his vote but also set up a vote on an amendment from Arizona Independent Kyrsten Sinema that would have kept Title 42 in place and increased funding for immigration enforcement and processing.
The Senate rejected Sinema's amendment, which required 60 votes for passage. But Sinema's language allowed moderate Democrats facing tough re-election challenges in 2024, like Sinema and Montana Sen. Jon Tester, to vote for keeping Title 42 in place while opposing Lee's amendment, which also failed due to lack of Democratic support.
"This was a runaround designed by Schumer to protect the budget without putting vulnerable senators out on a limb," said a Senate Democratic aide. "Everyone won, except for Mike Lee."
The Senate also brushed off an argument from Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., that the giant spending bill ignores Senate rules aimed at making sure new spending is paid for with spending cuts. But when forced by Paul to confront that issue, the Senate voted 65-31 in favor of waiving Senate budget rules.