Negotiators from the US Senate and House of Representatives unveiled a USD 1 trillion spending bill, eliminating the threat of another government shutdown, at least until October.
The high-stakes omnibus spending bill unveiled late yesterday sets discretionary spending limits line by line for each federal agency until September 30, when the 2014 fiscal year ends.
"We are pleased to have come to a fair, bipartisan agreement on funding the government for 2014," said the negotiators, including Senate Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Barbara Mikulski, a Democrat.
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In addition to Mikulski, he other members of the negotiating team included House Appropriations Committee Chairman Hal Rogers, the panel's top Democrat Nita Lowey and the Senate Appropriations Committee's top Republican Richard Shelby.
In October, a bitter budget clash between Republicans and Democrats -- who control the House and Senate respectively -- triggered a 16-day government shutdown.
A deal to end the crisis financed the government through this coming Wednesday, January 15.
Last month, Congress passed a compromise two-year budget accord, marking a truce in the fiscal wars that have plagued Washington.
The newly unveiled consolidated appropriations bill provides USD 1.012 trillion to operate the federal government, not including social services and foreign military operations.
Because the agreement was the fruit of bipartisan negotiations between Republican and Democrats, it is likely to get adopted quickly by Congress this week, averting another shutdown crisis.
After two years of historic reductions, federal expenditures were set to rise again in 2014 as the deal erases painful and automatic spending cuts that were due to kick in on January 1 for the next two years.
Military spending, which had been set for net reductions, will increase slightly.
On top of top will come an additional USD 92 billion for foreign US military operations, mainly the war in Afghanistan, and USD 6.5 billion for extraordinary expenses linked to natural disasters.