The House passed a short-term spending bill Tuesday that would keep the government funded through March 23 and fully fund the military through September by a vote of 245-182, with 17 Democrats voting "yea." CBS writes:
House GOP appropriators unveiled the short-term spending bill, known as continuing resolution (CR), that would also fund the military at increased levels through the rest of the fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30. The rest of the government would operate under 2017-level funding through March 23. GOP leaders pitched the plan to rank-and-file Republicans Monday evening at a closed-door meeting.
The measure would not provide a fix for undocumented immigrants brought to the U.S. as children. Nor would it increase border security or provide funding for a southern border wall.
But the real say will still come from the Senate, where party leaders say they’re nearing a bipartisan compromise to fund the government for two years while lifting spending caps for both military and domestic programs.
[Sen. Chuck] Schumer also said that Democrats have made "very, very good progress in achieving parity" in budget deal negotiations, which would entail a balanced increase in spending limits to both the military and non-defense domestic programs.
That deal will likely not include a DACA fix or a provision to raise the debt ceiling and the fate of a provision to raise the debt ceiling remains unclear for now.