The House approved $1.4 trillion in spending for the fiscal year that began almost three months ago, in an almost surreal business-as-usual fashion that seemingly ignored the historic articles of impeachment scheduled for the floor the very next day.

Lawmakers made a show of dividing the spending measures into two bundles, in order to avoid the oft-ridiculed omnibus bill that both sides say represents the worst of the “swamp.” But the rushed nature of the vote, and in particular the late-night deal that tacked on a nearly $54 billion tax package, runs counter to promises of a more transparent process where the rank-and-file has input and time to study the legislation.

“I’m not going to do it again. Nobody read it. It’s only hours old. Some people don’t even know what is in” it, President Donald Trump said in March 2018 when he signed a $1.3 trillion fiscal 2018 omnibus bill.

Instead, lawmakers released 2,313 pages of legislation Monday afternoon with both chambers expected to vote within a few days. “Congress is just cutting the omnibus into two bills, sending them to [Trump] at the same time, and hoping he won’t notice or care that it’s still just actually one big omnibus,” tweeted Brendan Buck, a former aide to then-Speaker Paul D. Ryan, R-Wis.