The U.S. Senate, rushing to meet a looming deadline, approved and sent to President Donald Trump a 1.4 trillion U.S. dollars package of fiscal 2020 spending bills that would end prospects of government shutdowns at week's end when temporary funding expires.
By strong bipartisan margins and with White House backing, the Senate passed the two gigantic funding bills for government programs through September 30.
Trump is expected to sign both bills into law before a midnight Friday deadline.
Notably, the Pentagon would get 738 billion U.S. dollars for military activities – 22 billion U.S. dollars more than last year.
Investments in domestic programs range from child nutrition and college grants to research on gun violence for the first time in decades and money for affordable housing programs that Trump had opposed.
The legislation also contains a series of new initiatives, including funding for Trump's military Space Force, raising the age for purchasing tobacco products to 21 from the current 18, and repealing some taxes that were intended to fund the Affordable Care Act health insurance, popularly known as Obamacare.
About a year ago, the U.S. government plunged into a record-long, 35-day partial shutdown after Congress refused to give Trump the money he wanted to build a U.S.-Mexico border wall – one that he previously had insisted Mexico would finance.
This time around, money for border security would stay level at 1.37 billion U.S. dollars, far below what Trump had sought.
(With input from Reuters)