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tv   Washington Journal Aidan Quigley  CSPAN  September 13, 2023 11:56am-12:00pm EDT

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teacher federation, from the afl-cio, and accountability researcher but certainly the invite list is heavily tilted toward tech company ceos. that in and of itself is pretty interesting. i think it sends a clear message about who congress is trying to talk to, who congress is trying to get a perspective from what comes to ai regulation. >> host: reporting on this issue for the m.i.t. technology review is tate ryan-mosley. you can see see her work@technologyreview.com. she serves.com. she serves as a senior technology that the post reported. thanks wreak havoc hope you come back and talk about these issues with us. >> guest: thank you so much. >> host: cq roll call, the budget appropriations reporter joining us to give us the latest. thanks for your time this morning. >> guest: thank you very much for having me. >> host: so at this point are we still on the path of a possible lack of money for the government? >> guest: i think so. i do think that yesterday's
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announcement from speakeraw mccarthy does complicate the next two at half weeks when it comes to government spending. congress needs to pass a stopgap spending bill by the end of the month to keep the government to appoint a partial government shutdown. right now that's looking more questionable than ever, especially with yesterday's news. that's because any ndaa continue resolution discussion with need bipartisan support in the house. it appears because there are some house republicans who do not want to vote for any government spending at all, and they really, it's going to be complicated. democrats are not going to feel obliged to help speaker mccarthy i think after this, let's take a step back. when you talk about seconding resolutions to explain what the means and what it means to the sole funding process. >> guest: so last september
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congress passed an omnibus which lasts through the end of september, and at that time government, the fiscal 2023 spending will run out and it's time for fiscal 2024 spending to get past. that's because the turn of the fiscal year is at the end of this month. so when thathe happens, congress needs to step in and pass appropriations. ideally, that would be the full year of preparation of the window where close to an agreement on those so you speak a stopgap measure. >> host: what are the discussions taking place in the background on this? who is leaving those discussions? >> guest: so we're seeing kind of two very different paths here from the house and a senator in the senate where bipartisan appropriations thought there was a big procedural vote yesterday
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for the package of appropriation bills in the senate. huge bipartisan support. they are working together. so the center city is mod with a bipartisan bill. on the house side you're looking at a more partisan process and that that is somewhat normal at the house will go on a more partisan route. at this point but they are really running into some issues when it comes to passing appropriation bills on the floor of the house do you have some house conservatives who want significant more cuts to the billsil that appropriate or writing which already underneath the cap, and yet the moderates about policy provisions. it will be really interesting the next few weeks. we are still at the point where both chambers are working on their individual appropriation process and continue resolution negotiations have not quite started at least of high level

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