WASHINGTON — After Congress passed a government financing package, President Joe Biden signed it on Saturday, thereby preventing a shutdown scenario.
The plan contains a one-year agriculture bill, $100 billion in disaster aid, and existing government funding through March 14.
The law has been signed, according to a White House statement, although Biden has not yet officially commented on the news.
Biden backed the legislation that finally cleared Congress, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Friday.
“While it does not include everything we sought, it includes disaster relief that the President requested for the communities recovering from the storm, eliminates the accelerated pathway to a tax cut for billionaires, and would ensure that the government can continue to operate at full capacity,” Jean-Pierre said in his statement on Friday.
The signing of the law ends a tumultuous few days that started when Elon Musk, an ally of President-elect Donald Trump, and Trump publicly opposed the first bipartisan agreement, thereby killing it.
Republicans in Congress quickly repeated the two men’s strong opposition to the pact.
Though it was not included in the final agreement, Trump also encouraged Republicans to either raise or remove the debt ceiling.
Shortly after the House passed the spending package, the Senate cleared it overnight on Saturday.
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