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Messi inspires Argentina great escape over Egypt, Swiss advance
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How rescuers carried out 180-hour 'miracle' amid Venzuela's ruins
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Scotland boss Townsend expects Russell will face Springboks
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Messi inspires Argentina great escape over Egypt
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Argentina produce epic World Cup fightback to beat Egypt, reach quarters
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Mexico probing if US violated sovereignty in 2024 drug lord capture
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Nigeria's Dangote confirms Lamu, Kenya for east Africa mega-refinery
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Zverev reaches first Wimbledon quarter-final
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Study points to likely route for Hannibal's legendary Alpine crossing
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Nordic joy as Traeen takes yellow, Pedersen wins Tour de France 4th stage
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Traeen takes yellow, Pedersen wins Tour de France 4th stage
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Tanker attacks send oil higher, stocks hit by AI jitters
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UK hard-right leader Farage resigns as MP to force snap vote in finances row
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IOC shuffle 2030 Winter Games events and promise gender parity
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Time ticking on US deadline to avert shutdown
Four months after barely avoiding a catastrophic default, the world's largest economy is once again on the verge of a major fiscal crisis.
President Joe Biden's Democrats are engaged in a bitter feud with Republican rivals in Congress over spending bills, which, if not passed into law soon, may trigger a government shutdown.
US lawmakers have until midnight on September 30 to reach an agreement, before funding for government services is due to dry up.
A shutdown would put at risk the finances of hundreds of thousands of workers at national parks, museums and other sites operating on federal funding, but it could also carry significant political risk for Biden as he runs for re-election in 2024.
House Republicans failed to support the government spending levels agreed to between Biden and Speaker Kevin McCarthy, the top Republican in Congress, that would keep government gears turning, the White House has said.
"A small group of extreme Republicans don't want to live up to the deal, so now everyone in America could be forced to pay the price," Biden said Saturday.
"It's time for Republicans to start doing the job America elected them to do."
Tensions are mounting around additional aid for Kyiv, after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visited Congress Thursday pleading for more weapons to battle Russian forces 18 months into the war.
Both parties in the Senate support the $24 billion aid bill. But a handful of hardline Republicans in the House of Representatives are threatening to block it.
"I am not voting for one single penny to go to a war in Ukraine," congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, a close ally of former president Donald Trump, said in a video posted on X, the former Twitter.
"I am America First, I work for the United States of America. I work for the American people."
Fellow House Republican Eli Crane echoed that view.
"People all over the country are so tired of funding others... We continue to spend and spend and spend, money that we don't have," he said in a video on social media.
Such bluster is putting McCarthy in a bind.
"He's in a very difficult position because the holdouts keep saying to Kevin McCarthy: 'Don't bring bipartisan bills to the floor, we don't want you to use Democrat votes to try to avert a shutdown,'" House Republican Mike Turner told ABC News Sunday talk show "This Week."
- Recurring spectacle -
The budget vote in Congress regularly turns into a standoff, with each party using the prospect of a shutdown to obtain concessions from the other -- until a solution is found at the last minute.
But this year the showdown is exacerbated by new levels of polarization on Capitol Hill.
In the Senate, debate is led by two political heavyweights, Democratic majority leader Chuck Schumer and Mitch McConnell, the Republican minority leader.
"Leader McConnell and I are both strongly for aid for Ukraine," Schumer told CNN Friday. "And I believe the majority of the members of both parties in the Senate agree with that."
If no firm agreement is reached, lawmakers could turn to a short-term funding measure, called a continuing resolution, which would offer temporary respite to lawmakers to find common ground.
The shutdown prospect comes just four months after the debt ceiling crisis, during which the United States came dangerously close to defaulting on its debt, which could have had disastrous consequences for the American economy and beyond.
As part of the deal averting default, Democrats agreed to limit certain spending in hopes the budget would be approved smoothly.
"A deal is a deal," White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said, blaming Republicans for the risk of a "needless shutdown."
If the government were to halt operations, low-income families may not receive their food aid checks, air traffic could be disrupted and national parks could close.
Civil servants deemed "non-essential" will be asked to stay home, receiving paychecks only when the problem is resolved.
The United States has lived through four shutdowns since 1976. The longest began in late 2018, lasted five weeks and cost the American economy $3 billion, according to congressional figures.
Most lawmakers say they oppose a repeat -- but avoiding one might be difficult.
"I don't want to see a shutdown," House Republican Tony Gonzales told CBS News on Sunday. "But there is no doubt in my mind that the country is headed for a shutdown, and everyone should prepare as such."
T.Zimmermann--VB