KEY POINTS
  • Congress is trying to pass a two-day government funding extension as it has only hours to prevent a shutdown.
  • Lawmakers are struggling to finalize a $900 billion coronavirus relief package.
  • Congressional leaders aim to approve both the pandemic aid plan and a spending bill, but they may have to pass a short-term funding bill to buy time to finish and write a rescue proposal.
  • Last-minute disputes are preventing Congress from passing a relief package that includes direct payments, small business loans and a boost to unemployment insurance.
US Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky, walks to his office from the Senate Floor at the US Capitol in Washington, DC on December 18, 2020.

Congress moved perilously close to letting the government shut down as lawmakers failed Friday to put the finishing touches on a massive spending and coronavirus rescue package.

Ahead of the midnight Friday deadline to pass a spending bill, the House introduced a two-day stopgap bill to keep the government running. Lawmakers gave themselves about seven-and-a-half hours to get it through both chambers of Congress, including a Senate where one member's objection can block its swift passage.