Obama signs bill averting US government shutdown

House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy of Calif., center, walks to a procedural vote and debate in the House on a stopgap spending bill to avert a government shutdown, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2015, on Capitol Hill in Washington. AP Photo

Congress and President Barack Obama steered the US government clear of a shutdown on Sept.30 hours before a midnight deadline, approving temporary federal spending that does not defund a women's health care provider as Republicans hoped.

The Senate and House acted pragmatically to fund the government at current levels beyond the Oct.1 start of the new fiscal year, and Obama signed the measure into law late Sept.30.
 
The stopgap only runs through December 11, setting up a new potential fiscal clash just 10 weeks from now.
 
But it avoids a repeat of 2013, when lawmakers divided over spending allowed the government to skid into a damaging 16-day shutdown.
 
Obama hailed the congressional action.
 
"It looks like the Republicans will just barely avoid shutting down the government for the second time in two years," he told state Democrats at the White House.
 
House Republican Charlie Dent noted it would be "utterly reckless" to trigger a spending crisis over Planned Parenthood.
 
"Whether you like them or not isn't the point. We should never shut the government down over that or frankly any other issue at this time."  

The spending includes funding for the women's health care and abortion provider long targeted by Republicans.
 
Debate exploded earlier this year, when abortion foes released secretly-recorded videos that they said show Planned Parenthood officials discussing the for-profit sale of fetal tissue obtained during abortion procedures, which would violate federal law.
 
Planned Parenthood insists the videos were deceitfully edited, and that its staff was merely discussing the process for obtaining tissue and the legal payments by researchers to cover expenses...

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