The Senate is nearing passage of a budget deal after lawmakers agreed to end debate early Friday morning.
Under Senate rules, the earliest lawmakers could cut off debate on the spending deal was early Friday morning unless they got an agreement from every senator — which Paul refused.
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“They get in power and they decide, we’re just going to spend that money too. We’re going to send that money to our friends this time. The hypocrisy hangs in the air and chokes anyone with a sense of decency or intellectual honesty,” Paul said from the Senate floor.
Paul wanted leadership to give him a vote on an amendment to keep budget caps in place. But Senate leaders, warning that they couldn’t give into Paul’s demand without opening up a flood gate of similar requests, instead offered to let him raise a budget point of order.
“It’s his right, of course, to vote against the bill,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said earlier Thursday. “But I would argue that it’s time to vote.”
But when McConnell and several other GOP senators tried to move up an initial vote, Paul objected.
Paul’s tactics meant the government missed a midnight deadline to stave off a government shutdown, which comes roughly three weeks after Democrats — aided by a small band of Republicans — forced the government to shutter for three days.
GOP senators blasted the libertarian-leaning senator late Thursday, arguing he was delaying the inevitable passage of the budget deal.
“I think people understand this is the act of a single senator who is just trying to make a point but doesn’t really care too much about who he inconveniences,” said Sen. John Cornyn (Texas), the No. 2 Senate Republican.
It’s unclear when the Senate will take a final vote on the budget deal, but it’s expected to be within hours. And with only a simple majority needed, it’s widely expected to pass.
A group of progressive senators, widely viewed as contenders for the Democratic Party’s 2020 presidential nomination, will oppose the budget because it does not include a fix for the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.
Meanwhile, a coalition of fiscal hawks and conservatives are opposing the bill, arguing it blows a hole in the deficit.
“This budget deal shows the American people exactly how broken our budget and appropriations process is,” Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) said in announcing his opposition to the deal.
“It does not address our runaway deficits, and actually takes major steps backwards in the fight to reign in Washington’s overspending appetite.”