Attorneys general urge Senate action on stopgap funding measure

Alan Wilson, Attorney General of South Carolina
Alan Wilson, Attorney General of South Carolina
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Attorney General Alan Wilson of South Carolina has joined a group of 26 state attorneys general in calling on the United States Senate to pass a short-term continuing resolution (CR) to prevent a government shutdown. The coalition sent a letter urging Senate leaders to approve the funding extension, which would keep federal operations running while budget negotiations continue.

Wilson criticized Senate Democratic leaders for what he described as political maneuvering that could disrupt essential services. “The U.S. House of Representatives passed a continuing resolution to keep the government operating, but Senate Democratic leaders are playing a political game that threatens vital services that the people of South Carolina and the nation rely on,” Wilson said. “We urge Senate Democrats to do the responsible thing and pass the commonsense funding extension today.”

In their letter, the attorneys general wrote, “A clean, short-term continuing resolution keeps the government functioning at current levels to give the parties time to negotiate. CRs may not be the ideal way for governments to operate, but they are the responsible thing to do under the circumstances. This commonsense option keeps the servicemen and women, border agents, and TSA screeners who keep us safe paid. It keeps grant funding for state and local law enforcement and first responders going. And while Social Security checks would still be mailed out in a shutdown, benefit verification and card issuance would pause, affecting seniors in potentially dire ways. A government shutdown would disrupt our economy, threaten public safety, and further erode the people’s confidence in public institutions, but all of that is entirely avoidable.”

The letter also stated: “The irony is that under the Biden Administration with Democrat leadership, Congress passed 13 clean funding extensions. In fact, only weeks ago, Democrats were pressing for just this yet again – a clean, short-term continuing resolution to keep government working while Congress negotiated the budget. But now, at the eleventh hour, that is apparently not enough, and Democrats are holding all of government hostage, seeking a $1.5-trillion ransom, laden with poison-pill riders and partisan policy initiatives.”

Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch led this effort along with Wilson and attorneys general from Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota,Tennessee,T exas ,Utah ,Virginia ,and West Virginia.

The full text of their letter can be found online.



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