US | Congress Spending Bill Averts Shutdown, for Now Congress finds $4B in 'easy' cuts By Newser Editors and Wire Services Posted Mar 1, 2011 3:57 PM CST Copied House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, left, and House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Va., look on during a news conference on Capitol Hill. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci) The House has passed a bill to cut federal spending by $4 billion and avert a partial shutdown of the government—for two weeks. The measure passed by a bipartisan 335-91 vote that came shortly after Democrats in the Senate said they would go along. The White House had sought a four-week or longer stopgap bill, but that effort fizzled almost immediately. The measure approved by the House will buy time for difficult talks on a longer-term measure. House Republicans last month passed a bill that would cut $61 billion from agencies over the second half of the budget year expiring Sept. 30. That bill is strongly opposed by Democrats, and the White House promises a veto. The $4 billion in today's cuts are some of the easiest for Congress to make. Read These Next Meet the Oscar winner who says the award injured her career. Researchers jumped in car to investigate cow tools. Elon Musk just made a big donation to a pro-Trump candidate. Study suggests out who's paying for tariffs: Americans. Report an error