Skip to content
Rep. Scott Perry (R-PA) (Photo from perry.house.gov)

The U.S. House of Representatives voted 339-85 on March 6 for a bipartisan compromise spending package that will avert a partial federal government shutdown and boost spending on food programs for low-income families and services for veterans. As he has done repeatedly in the past year, Republican Rep. Scott Perry voted against keeping the government running.

“This pork barrel bill had no input from rank-and-file members. It was created behind closed doors to maintain the status quo,” he wrote in a Facebook post. “The one thing Congress always does on a bipartisan basis is spend money we don’t have. Voting no on a complete policy surrender was simple.”

Congress was supposed to pass 12 appropriations bills by the end of September 2023, but failed to do so amid House GOP infighting and disarray. Instead, lawmakers have approved a series of four stopgap bills to allow the federal government to keep operating temporarily since that time.

Perry voted against all four of those continuing resolutions

The so-called minibus package of bills will provide funding for the departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Energy, Housing and Urban Development, Interior, Justice, Transportation, and Veterans Affairs, as well as some other agencies and military construction programs. 

The bill now heads to the Senate, where action is expected before those agencies run out of money on March 9.

In the past, government shutdowns have proven damaging to the U.S. economy, reducing its gross domestic product by billions of dollars. While core government functions can continue during a shutdown, no federal employees can receive pay, and programs such as food safety inspections, the processing of new Social Security claims, and veterans’ services grind to a halt.

Still, some House Republicans and former President Donald Trump have embraced letting the government shut down. 

Virginia Republican Rep. Bob Good, the current chair of the right-wing House Freedom Caucus, told his GOP colleagues on Feb. 5 that they should shut the government down in September, ahead of the November election, to stop Democrats from achieving any additional policy victories that might affect the outcome, according to the website Punchbowl News. 

Last July, Good told reporters: “We should not fear a government shutdown. Most of what we do up here is bad anyway. Most of what we do up here hurts the American people.”

Related articles


Share this article:
Subscribe to our newsletter