Boehner
declined to say over the weekend if he would permit a vote on the
Senate-passed measure, and his spokesman similarly sidestepped the
question on Monday. Officials in both parties predict it would pass, and
end the recurring threat of a partial agency shutdown.
Democrats
said they believe the speaker eventually would relent and permit a vote
on the bill, which conservatives oppose and President Barack Obama is
eager to sign. "I would hope and expect that we will have a vote" this
week, said Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, the second-ranking House
Democrat.The White House also urged a vote on the measure.
Across the Capitol, Senate Democrats were ready to do their part. They vowed to foreclose another one of Boehner's steadily declining list of options by dealing defeat to a Republican call for formal House-Senate negotiations on the subject.
A
decision by Boehner to permit a vote on the stand-alone funding bill
would mark the complete failure of a Republican strategy designed to
make funding for the Department of Homeland Security contingent on
concessions from Obama. The president has issued a pair of directives
since 2012 that lifted the threat of deportation from millions of
immigrants living in the country illegally, steps that Republicans say
exceeded his constitutional authority.
DHS, which has major anti-terrorism duties, is also responsible for border control.A funding bill for the agency has produced partisan gridlock in the first several weeks of the new Congress, even though Republicans gained control of the Senate last fall and won more seats in the House than at any time in 70 years.
Democratic
unity blocked passage in the Senate of House-passed legislation with
the immigration provisions. By late last week, a split in House GOP
ranks brought the department to the brink of a partial shutdown. That
was averted when Congress approved a one-week funding bill that Obama
signed into law only moments before a midnight Friday deadline.
The
public recriminations bordered on ferocious. Lawmakers aligned with the
leadership complained about tea party-backed conservatives who refused
to vote even for a three-week bill that was designed to provide a
face-saving way out of the struggle.
Rep.
Devin Nunes of California, who chairs the House Intelligence Committee,
said his party's leadership was in a position of trying to "placate a
small group of phony conservative members who have no credible policy
proposals and no political strategy to stop Obama's lawlessness."
He added they are "seemingly unaware that they can't advance conservatism by playing fantasy football with their voting cards."
Boehner, interviewed over the weekend on CBS' Face the Nation, was less acerbic, but critical nonetheless.
Asked if his GOP critics had a plan to force Obama to sign legislation they wanted, he replied, "Not that I know of."
Despite
claims by House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California and others
in her party, Boehner denied pledging last week to permit a vote on a
full-year funding bill without immigration provisions in exchange for
Democratic votes on the one-week measure that avoided a partial
shutdown.
Instead, he said in
the CBS interview he had promised her he would follow the "regular
order" in the House, which generally means following the rules as
legislation is debated. In this case, he said if Senate Democrats
blocked GOP attempts to open negotiations on the issue, the stand-alone
"may be coming back to the House." He didn't say if he would allow a
vote on it.
Boehner's
spokesman, Michael Steel, also declined to say if the bill backed by
Democrats and the White House would be allowed to come to a vote.
Instead, he noted that the House is seeking formal negotiations, adding,
"That is the proper course of action under the Constitution, as Senate
Democrats have said in the past."
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