(Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell don't usually have the same objectives, but their interests are in rare alignment as they meet Monday afternoon with other congressional leaders.
With the election coming in less than two months and control of the Senate at stake, lawmakers are especially keen to get back on the campaign trail. That means Obama is likely to get most of the funding he has sought since February to tackle the Zika virus — and that a government shutdown can be avoided.
Obama is meeting with McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan, as well as Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi.
McConnell hasn't been waiting around for the fractious House GOP to get its act together, announcing last week he would negotiate with Reid and the president on Zika as part of stopgap funding for most of the government until early December. Current funding runs out on Sept. 30, the end of the government's fiscal year.
But there are several issues that could still derail a smooth negotiation over the spending measure. The White House has asked Congress to help restore the full authority of the U.S. Export-Import Bank to issue loans. The bank says a deal would free up a more than $20 billion backlog from more than 30 export deals requiring board approval.
Separately, a number of Republicans are demanding a provision that would force the U.S. government to retain its oversight over Internet domains after Oct. 1.
Flood Funding
Lawmakers also may discuss demands for extra funding to cope with flooding in Louisiana after a severe storm. The entire Louisiana congressional delegation wrote a letter to Obama on Monday asking for supplemental disaster funding, while a bipartisan group of Texas lawmakers separately wrote on Monday to congressional leaders asking for more money to respond to recent floods in Texas.
The Zika spending may be the easiest issue to resolve. Florida Senator Marco Rubio — who has buoyed Republican hopes for retaining the Senate after declaring he would run for re-election — told reporters last week he expected the Senate to once again take up a $1.1 billion Zika bill passed earlier this year by the Senate. That bill would exclude House-passed provisions that Democrats have declared poison pills, including one that Democrats say would effectively prevent Zika money going to Planned Parenthood.
For Rubio and other Republicans running for re-election, Congress's failure to act on Zika is a potential vulnerability, even as Democratic senators have repeatedly blocked the House's version of the bill.
On the House side, Ryan and many of his rank-and-file Republicans appear willing, or resigned, to whatever short-term spending measure the Senate can send them. But House conservatives, who would prefer to fund the government into next year, may demand policy changes.