President TrumpDonald Trump Trump Signs Bill to Extend Government Funding for 24 Hours Congress Approves One-Day Emergency Bill Before Closing Deadline What’s in Coronavirus Bill 0 Billion MORE signed an ongoing resolution on Sunday evening that the government will fund for the next 24 hours, preventing a shutdown just before midnight and giving Congress additional time to pass a coronavirus measure and an accompanying $ 1.4 trillion government funding bill.
The White House announced just before midnight that Trump signed the bill shortly after the House and Senate each passed the measure Sunday night. Congress is expected to take up the government’s stimulus package and funding bill Monday. The government would have closed at midnight without the one-day extension of funding.
The ongoing resolution was needed after the weekend stimulus talks reached deadlock. It is the second such measure Trump has signed in the past two days, after a two-day short-term bill was passed and signed into law on Friday night.
Leader of the majority of the Senate Mitch McConnellAddison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnell Trump signs bill to extend government funding for 24 hours Surprise medical bill prevention included in year-end legislative package Congress agrees 0 stimulus checks MORE (R-Ky.) Sunday night announced that congressional negotiators had struck a deal that would link $ 1.4 trillion of government funding to about $ 900 billion in further coronavirus relief, a major breakthrough between the two parties after months of talks on and off.
A late disagreement over the Federal Reserve’s lending powers threatened the broader deal over the weekend, but was resolved by a bipartisan group by midnight on Saturday, paving the way for an agreement.
Trump has barely been involved in stimulus talks, but kept his attention disputing the election results that saw him be defeated by the president-elect Joe BidenJoe BidenTrump signs bill to extend government funding for 24 hours.
Still, Trump has pushed for the inclusion of direct payments to Americans. He tweeted late Saturday that Congress needed to negotiate a stimulus deal and pressed lawmakers to “give more money to direct payments.”
The Washington Post reported last week that Trump wanted to call for instant payments of a minimum of $ 1,200 and a maximum of $ 2,000, but that aides intervened to prevent him from making the demand. The deal announced Sunday includes a round of $ 600 direct payments to certain Americans.
Trump told reporters earlier this month that he would back a coronavirus relief package if Congress reached a deal, and aides said on Sunday that he would back it.