The NPR Politics Podcast - How The Spending Bill Died
Episode Date: December 19, 2024For a few hours, Congress looked poised to avoid a government shutdown by passing a new short-term spending bill. But, Elon Musk, Vivek Ramaswamy & President-elect Donald Trump voiced opposition, and ...House Speaker Mike Johnson & lawmakers are back to square one. What now? This episode: political correspondent Sarah McCammon, congressional correspondent Deirdre Walsh, and senior White House correspondent Tamara Keith.The podcast is produced by Kelli Wessinger, and edited by Casey Morell. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hi, this is Kate and I just graduated test pilot school as the only civilian and only
female student in my class. This podcast was recorded at 12 37 p.m. Eastern time on Thursday,
December 19th, 2024. Things may have changed by the time you hear this, but I'll still
be catching up on sleep after all that hard work. Here's the show.
Hey, congrats to you. Very impressive. Good job. Hey there,
it's the NPR politics podcast. I'm Sarah McCammon. I cover politics. I'm Deirdre Walsh.
I cover Congress. And I'm Susan Davis. I also cover politics. A negotiated bipartisan deal
to keep the government running into next year collapsed in dramatic fashion yesterday. And now a shutdown will begin at midnight on Friday unless lawmakers can scramble together
a new deal.
Deirdre, how did this happen?
Well, as you said, the speaker negotiated this bipartisan deal that essentially funded
the government into mid-March.
His members knew he was negotiating with Democrats.
We're still in divided government on Capitol Hill, so he had to cut a deal with Senate
Democrats. The bill also included money for disaster aid. A lot of his own members support
disaster aid for places like North Carolina, Georgia, South Carolina that were hit hard
by hurricanes in the last few months. But he also put some other things on it that Democrats wanted. There was a pay raise for members of Congress.
There were farm subsidies. But conservatives were never going to vote for this bipartisan
deal. Conservatives in the House of Representatives hate short-term spending bills. They rarely,
if ever, vote for them. And they were very mad at the speaker. Even though the politics right now are, we're still in divided government and you need Democrats
to pass these bills, they sort of piled on and they got the ear of Elon Musk, who is
now a close advisor to president-elect Trump, obviously the richest man in the world, very
powerful on media ecosystem and obviously on his own platform X. Musk
started tweeting his opposition to the deal and fired up the conservative base against
it. He cheered on every single House Republican who went public saying, I'm a no, with dozens
and dozens of tweets and the deal was dead. And Sue, I mean, Trump isn't even president yet, not for another month almost, but
already he seems to be calling the shots in Washington in many ways.
You know, there was a few hours yesterday where there was some suspense about what
would happen. And I think some pretty fascinating politics playing out with
Elon Musk essentially taking a policy position on legislation.
And let's remember, Elon Musk is basically an unelected bureaucrat. He has been appointed
along with Vivek Ramaswamy to oversee something that's called the Department of Government
Efficiency that won't really come into shape until Donald Trump takes office. But taking
a position on legislation for someone outside the realm of government is kind of unusual
to begin with. And Trump didn't weigh in for a while. It was like, what's he going to do here? Because this was a bipartisan agreement
that was essentially also intended to sort of clean the decks to get the unfinished business of
Washington done and over with so Donald Trump could come into office with as clean a slate as
possible. But hours after Musk opposed it, yeah, Donald Trump did what he's done so many times before,
even to his own allies on Capitol Hill. He tweeted that he opposed the bill. He even
went so far to say that if any Republicans supported it, they should be primaried in
the 2026 election. And then that upended everything. And the place that Washington is at, once
again, is one of, frankly, complete chaos. It's unclear what Republicans can pass with their
own votes. It denies the reality that Democrats still control the Senate. So ultimately anything
is going to have to be bipartisan, which was Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer's message
from the floor today. And frankly, Sarah, I don't know how it ends. And it has put
a shutdown, which seemed really off the table just a couple of days ago, not only back on
the table, but maybe unavoidable.
Is this Trump driving the bus or is this Musk driving the bus?
I mean, yesterday it appeared that Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy were driving the bus.
They were the ones lobbying against this bill for hours going unanswered.
As Sue said, we have seen this movie before.
In Trump's first term, he did occasionally go on Twitter and blow up negotiations that
his own party signed off on hours before.
But the fact that these two unelected appointees to this outside the government advisory panel,
the Department of Government Efficiency, were the ones driving the bus on a bipartisan
spending deal is something we've never seen before.
It also shows you how much power these folks have and how Republicans on the Hill who were
pushing for things that will help their own constituents.
Now it's unclear how much money is going to get in a final deal on those things. And that's a real life impact coming from two unelected people who don't
have skin in the game and weren't elected to any office. And it just shows the sort
of unpredictability that is sort of the new version of Trump's second term in office.
And he hasn't been sworn in yet.
And why? Why are Musk and Rameswami and apparently now Trump opposing this deal?
It's a great question. I think the opposition to it is still a bit of a head-scratcher,
again, considering that their own ally on Capitol Hill, Speaker Johnson, negotiated this deal.
What Trump in a statement along with Vice President-elect JD Vance seemed to indicate is one, this broad idea that Democrats got too much in this deal, which is a bit of a
head-scratcher because frankly, it's just a stopgap spending bill. It doesn't contain
any of the annual spending bills just into mid-March. And a lot of the extraneous legislative
provisions that are in there are actually bipartisan. You generally can't make what we often call a Christmas tree legislation because everything that needs
to pass rides on it unless this stuff has bipartisan support, especially in the Senate,
and can clear a 60-vote hurdle. So the idea that there was anything that was like strictly
a Democratic win in here isn't exactly accurate. They did also take issue with the fact that
the bill would essentially
reinstate a pay raise for members of Congress, which I don't think I have to explain why
the optics of that are bad politics that President Trump might not want to support, but members
of Congress haven't had a raise since the 2008 financial crisis. So that was an effort
to sort of keep their own salaries up with the rate of inflation. And also broadly speaking, I would say that like, there's just this internal conservative rejection of behemoth legislation. And this thing was over 1500
pages. It just had so many different policy provisions in it. And frankly, there's a bit of
just a conspiratorial line of thinking about legislation this big, that it's just as I think
critics of this would call like Rand Paul of Kentucky, the Uniparty, they're trying to sneak stuff past you.
This is a bad way to govern, doing it all in one big operation. So just also the optics
of what this bill looked like seemed to really certainly be rejected by Elon Musk. And to
your earlier point, Sarah, I would note that some top Democrats today, including Rosa DeLauro,
who's the top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, has started referring to him as President Musk. And that to me seems like
a line that we might be hearing a lot from Democrats in the coming months.
Okay, let's take a quick break. We'll have more when we get back.
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And we're back. Dear Drew, this deal, as we said, was negotiated by Speaker Mike Johnson.
We've talked about what a delicate balancing act that can be. And Trump and Musk completely
undercut him quite quickly by surprise. What does that say about Speaker Johnson's grip
on power and maybe on his office?
I mean, I think it's very shaky. His own members are publicly criticizing
him. The president-elect is trashing this deal. And I think that it's unclear that the
speaker can be elected speaker on January 3rd. Look, a lot can happen a couple of weeks.
We've seen things change in a matter of hours on Capitol Hill in the last 24 hours. If he's able to negotiate something that Trump
blesses and Trump endorses him for speaker, there isn't really anyone else who has the votes for the
job or potentially could get the votes for the job. So we'll see. But I just think it's going to make
his reelection very, very tough in January. I think the other criticism that I've heard from House Republicans is that the speaker cut this deal to avoid making tough
choices that would antagonize some of his conservative
critics inside the House Republican conference
so that they would vote for him for speaker in January. He could have
agreed to sort of a broader bipartisan spending deal to clear
all of the spending debates
and not have Trump deal with that in March.
You know, this is just a short-term spending deal, which means Congress is going to have
to deal with this when Republicans have full control next year.
And I think a lot of Republicans in the building were saying, like, let's just clear the decks,
do what we have to do and have a clean slate next year.
But the speaker knew that was going to be tough politically and still ended up cutting
a deal which in fact was probably worse for him because of some of these items that got
tagged onto it.
I have to admit that I'm a little surprised at the Trump-Musk opposition in part because
leading into this negotiation and certainly up
into the election and after the election, Mike Johnson appeared to be within both Trump and
Musk's good graces. He's held onto the House majority, albeit a very narrow one. He's been
down in Mar-a-Lago. Trump has said nice public things about him. Johnson the other day on Fox
News noted that he's got a text chain with Musk and Rameswamy. And it's hard knowing that to then look at the Trump-Must opposition as
a little bit of a shanking of the speaker. I mean, doing this to him puts him in an incredibly
politically vulnerable position and fuels the internal critics of him on the right and
others who might think that, hey, maybe Trump doesn't actually have
Johnson's back and he's going into this vote in a little over two weeks. I think we lived
what it was like for House Republicans to be unable to elect a speaker for a very long
time. It was very messy. It was very chaotic. And I think this also opens the door to the
fact that come January 3rd, when a new Congress starts, the first order of business is to elect a speaker
and nothing can happen until a speaker is elected.
And this next Congress, as we sit here today,
looks like it's in a position to start
on a very chaotic note with a very dramatic speaker vote
that doesn't seem like Mike Johnson would be likely
to have the votes,
depending on how this current conflict plays out. I mean, we've talked about what Trump doesn't like and his allies don't like here, but
what does he want? He evidently wants to get rid of the debt ceiling or raise the debt ceiling.
Congress needs to increase the nation's borrowing limit when the country gets close to its limit,
right? It can't pay its bills if it doesn't
increase its borrowing authority. So we've gone through these debates year after year.
There's a bipartisan drama that goes along with this effort. And look, there is a bipartisan
support for getting rid of the debt limit as something that Congress needs to do periodically. What I'm hearing today is that
Republicans are trying to put together a slimmed down version of the deal that Mike Johnson
negotiated just two days ago that would include a stopgap funding, would include some disaster aid
for these states that need to rebuild, and would increase the debt limit for some period of time, maybe a couple of years.
That would allow the new Republican Congress in 2025
and President Trump to push through a major tax package
and not have to deal with the debt ceiling
as any kind of hurdle they would have to deal with.
I mean, where do the Democrats fit into all of this?
They are still for the moment in control of the Senate
and the White House.
Can Republicans really just muscle through exactly
what they want at this moment?
No, I mean, pretty clearly not.
And look at this past Congress.
Time and time again, Mike Johnson
had to rely on votes in the Democratic Party
specifically to do things like pass stopgap spending bills
or annual spending bills. There is a significant chunk of the Republican Party that fundamentally
is going to oppose these spending bills. And when you only have one, two, maybe three votes
to spare on any given vote, you're going to need the minority party. I mean, the reality
of Capitol Hill and power there, and again, Republicans are
going to take over the Senate, but Democrats in the minority still have the filibuster. You still
need 60 votes to get spending bills through. As Chuck Schumer again said on the floor today,
you can't do this without bipartisanship. So the idea that you can just pull the rug out from a
deal like this and then get everything you want in the end, it's just a political fantasy. There's absolutely no way to do it. And Republicans were almost
incapable of passing legislation on their own. I think there was this sense that Trump's
win and taking over the Senate and that word mandate we keep hearing would create this
like renewed sense of unity within the party for everyone to get on board.
But this episode is just a clear reminder that like Trump is so often a chaos agent and he can
blow things up in very unexpected ways. And Mike Johnson still a really junior speaker. He's only
been in this job for I guess maybe a little over a year and he didn't have much leadership
experience prior to that. He doesn't have a ton of political capital on his own, and I think he's in a pretty weak position right now.
I also think we're in a new era of the people around Trump that have influence. It's not
people like Mike Johnson anymore. He did have a really good relationship with Trump that he
spent the last year developing. He campaigned in something like 75 cities and raised tens of
millions of dollars to keep the House Republican majority. He frequently flew down to Mar-a-Lago
to coordinate various pieces of his legislative agenda to make sure Trump was on board. And
he really tried to develop a close relationship with him that clearly didn't stick in this case. But the fact that
Elon Musk is now this powerful is something we've never seen this kind of dynamic in any
kind of big government policy negotiation before. And I just don't know where it leads.
I think there is a real reluctance now just being around the building trying
to talk to Republicans, both Senate Republicans and House Republicans, that they don't want
to say something to antagonize Musk because of his close relationship to Trump and because
of the power he has over the incoming administration.
And look, Musk is very publicly today and ongoing making very plain that he is provoking
this chaos. He's responding to people on Twitter downplaying the idea that a shutdown
would be bad, even suggesting that they could shut down the government until January 20th,
which is when Donald Trump would take over. That's pretty through the looking glass politics.
And I think everything Deirdre said is exactly right. We've never had a situation analogous to this when
someone outside of government is wielding so much power inside of government.
Before we go though, I want to ask, where does the fallout from that chaos land if the
government shuts down? Who gets the blame for that?
I don't know who gets the blame, but I think it would be pretty apparent that it was the
Republican Party that drove the shutdown.
I just honestly, I can't say confidently that I think it would play badly for them
politically because I do think, and maybe they're right, that part of the message they
got in this election is that the American people want big dramatic change in Washington
and maybe people look at this and think, great, here it comes.
I think the unanswered question is what does it mean for the midterm elections, right?
So it may be what the Republican base wants and cheers on.
I mean, you see House Republicans basically saying, bring on the shutdown.
Let's just keep everything closed down till Trump is sworn in on January 20th.
The base loves that kind of talk.
But what about people in their districts who lose out to economic assistance at a time
where they really need it and there is a backlash to that, you know, these people were going to come
in and help out and address inflation and the high costs that we've been struggling with under the
Biden administration, but then what if things get worse and a couple of billionaires are the ones
driving the bus? I think that is something that we just don't know the answer to.
All right. We'll be back tomorrow. I'm Sarah McCammon. I cover politics. I'm Deirdre Walsh.
I cover Congress. And I'm Susan Davis. I also cover politics. And thank you for listening
to the NPR Politics Podcast. Listen to this podcast, sponsor free on Amazon Music with a Prime membership or any podcast
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