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HomeBEVOLVE NEWSEl Senado de Estados Unidos aprueba una prórroga presupuestaria y evita el...

El Senado de Estados Unidos aprueba una prórroga presupuestaria y evita el cierre del gobierno horas antes de la fecha límite

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A member of the Capitol police walks past the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on February 9, 2021 before the start of former US president Donald Trump's second Senate impeachment trial. - The US Senate gavels in Tuesday on Donald Trump's historic second impeachment trial, with his defense team decrying it as a "brazen political act" of retribution and Democratic prosecutors arguing that the ex-president wilfully incited a violent insurrection. The House of Representatives impeached him last month over his role in the deadly January 6 siege of the US Capitol by a pro-Trump mob, and his trial -- the first of a former president -- will feature the Senate's 100 members sitting as jurors.Trump's legal team Monday denounced the case as unconstitutional, calling it "absurd" to hold the former president responsible for the violence. (Photo by Nicholas Kamm / AFP) (Photo by NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP via Getty Images)
A member of the Capitol police walks past the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on February 9, 2021 before the start of former US president Donald Trump’s second Senate impeachment trial. – The US Senate gavels in Tuesday on Donald Trump’s historic second impeachment trial, with his defense team decrying it as a “brazen political act” of retribution and Democratic prosecutors arguing that the ex-president wilfully incited a violent insurrection. The House of Representatives impeached him last month over his role in the deadly January 6 siege of the US Capitol by a pro-Trump mob, and his trial — the first of a former president — will feature the Senate’s 100 members sitting as jurors.Trump’s legal team Monday denounced the case as unconstitutional, calling it “absurd” to hold the former president responsible for the violence. (Photo by Nicholas Kamm / AFP) (Photo by NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP via Getty Images)

OAN Staff Chloe Hauxwell

Viernes, 14 de enero de 2025

El Senado aprobó este viernes por un estrecho margen el proyecto de ‘resolución de continuidad’ para financiar al gobierno hasta septiembre, evitando con éxito el cierre del gobierno.

La votación fue de 62 a 82, con diez senadores demócratas votando junto con los legisladores republicanos. El único republicano que votó con la oposición fue el senador Rand Paul (republicano por Kentucky).

Entre los demócratas que votaron para evitar el cierre del gobierno se encuentran el líder de la minoría Chuck Schumer (demócrata por Nueva York), Dick Durbin (demócrata por Illinois) y Catherine Cortez-Masto (demócrata por Nevada).

El senador Schumer cambió su discurso a mitad de semana y decidió votar a favor de la medida.

Esta medida provisional mantendrá los niveles actuales de gasto federal sin cambios hasta el mes de septiembre.

Ahora, el proyecto de ley, pasará a manos del presidente Donald Trump para su promulgación.

Esta nota fue traducida al español por Eduardo Flores de una versión en inglés.

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