Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) on Monday said he expects "a lot of conservatives" will oppose the new spending bill.

"Money goes to Planned Parenthood, as you said. Money continues to go to sanctuary cities, but no money for the border wall," he said during an interview on CNN's "New Day."

"I think you're gong to see a lot of conservatives be against this plan this week."

Jordan, the former chairman of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, questioned why the government did a short-term spending bill last fall "if we weren't going to actually fight for the things we told the voters we were going to fight for."

ADVERTISEMENT

"So, if this is the deal we're going to get, it seems to be we should have just did the bill for the whole year," he said.

"But we specifically held a vote — we did a short-term spending bill for this time, so that when Republicans control the government, we could actually do the things we campaigned on."

He said the spending bill doesn't appear to do that.

"Plus it maintains ... this idea that for every new dollar you spend in defense money, you got to give the Democrats more money in nondefense," he said.

"That's, again, not what we campaigned on. So, I'm disappointed. We'll see how it plays out this week. But I think you're going to see conservatives have some real concerns."

Congressional negotiators have signed off on a deal to fund the government through September, avoiding a shutdown of federal agencies over a dispute on President Trump's border wall and other issues.

The legislation does not provide funding for construction of a wall along the country's southern border or eliminate money for so-called sanctuary cities that do not fully cooperate with federal immigration law, according to a summary provided by a senior congressional aide.

It also does not cut funding for Planned Parenthood.

Congress must pass the package by Friday, when a short-term stopgap approved last week runs out.