Congress has a lot on its plate.

Before the end of September, the legislature will have to deal with the debt ceiling, a government-funding bill to avoid a shutdown, and a slew of agency reauthorizations.

That’s a massive amount of work in a month when both chambers are in session for only 12 working days.

One potential solution gaining steam among some Republican members would attempt to tackle all of the issues at once.

Rep. Charlie Dent, of Pennsylvania, a cochair of the moderate Tuesday Group caucus, told Business Insider he was advocating a plan that would increase the debt ceiling and pass a long-term budget and could address other issues like funding the State Children’s Health Insurance Program.

“I’ve been telling leadership that for budgetary stability and for market stability we should bring together a plan that would fund the government for two years and increase the debt ceiling,” Dent said.

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Dent said he had brought the idea to GOP leadership. He was initially rebuffed because the Senate was focused on healthcare legislation, but he is now mounting another push.

“I’ve discussed this idea with the leadership – I’ve raised it with Democrats,” Dent said. “We think this could be something that gets broad, bipartisan support.”

Dent said that if a broader agreement was not reached, he would favor a clean increase of the debt ceiling to avoid a possibly devastating default on the US debt.

One GOP aide told Business Insider that an idea similar to Dent’s was under consideration. That plan, the aide said, would feature a continuing resolution to fund the government for six months instead a longer-term, two-year budget plan. The aide also said conservative members were unlikely to get on board and there was active opposition to the idea.

“We’re pushing our leadership against that approach,” the aide said. “I think that’s coming more from the Hill than from the White House. We think that’s just not a way to get conservative priorities included.”

It’s unclear what kind of support a proposal like Dent’s would garner more broadly in the House. Conservatives, especially in the House, are unlikely to support such a plan. To pass, it would most likely need significant input from Democrats, who could ask for concessions for their priorities.

Representatives for both House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said only that discussion regarding the issues was ongoing.

“House Republicans are discussing with the Senate and the administration, and we will act before the deadline,” AshLee Strong, a spokeswoman for Ryan, told Business Insider.