GREER — With an end to the longest government shutdown in sight, U.S. Rep. Ralph Norman, often known to be a hardline holdout, said he’s a “yes” on the measure to reopen the government — as long as it’s the bill lawmakers considered previously at the same spending levels.

“The devil’s in the details,” Norman, R-Rock Hill, told The Post and Courier the night of Nov. 10. “I'm gonna support it if it's what we agreed to, and I think it is.”

The bipartisan-backed package combines three tranches of funding into one to fund the government along with a stopgap bill that will last through Jan. 30.

That includes funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as SNAP or food stamps, through September. But it does not extend health care subsidies that expire in December, in

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