A spending bill that would ward off a government shutdown later this week and has the support of Alabama's two senators does not have the backing of U.S. Rep. Mo Brooks.

The bill would do more damage to the nation by permitting spending that the country can't afford, Brooks said in both a speech Wednesday on the House floor and later in a statement released through his office.

"I cannot and will not vote to destroy a country it took our ancestors centuries to build," Brooks said in his statement. "Yet, that is exactly what I am asked to do by those who want me to vote for the Senate Democrat debt junkie spending bill that America simply cannot afford."

Speaking to reporters in Washington on Wednesday, Brooks said of his vote on the bill: "I'm not only a no, I'm a hell no."

The government will shut down again Friday for the second time in less than a month unless Congress approves funding to keep it functioning.

The latest effort, unveiled Wednesday morning, would add more than $500 billion in federal spending over the next two years, The Washington Post reported.

The compromise struck by Senate leaders would provide more funding for the military as Republicans want while domestic programs would also get more money, which Democrats want.

Alabama Sens. Richard Shelby and Doug Jones have said they will support the bill while the White House has signaled its backing, too.

For Brooks, a fiscal hawk, it's too big of a compromise.

"The Senate's spending bill is a debt junkie's dream, a nightmare, and a misstep that plunges America into disaster," Brooks said on the House floor.

Brooks said in his speech that the nation's debt has grown from $438 billion in 2015 to $666 billion in 2017.

According to The Post, the "budget deal would increase discretionary spending -- the government functions funded year-to-year through congressional appropriations -- by 21 percent over existing budget caps."

Brooks' concerns echo the stance of the House Freedom Caucus, a conservative wing of the GOP of which Brooks is a member.

The Freedom Caucus posted on Twitter on Wednesday night that it was its "official position" to oppose the deal.

Official position: HFC opposes the caps deal. We support funding our troops, but growing the size of government by 13 percent is not what the voters sent us here to do. — House Freedom Caucus (@freedomcaucus) February 8, 2018

"Today, Senate Democrats demand excessive non-defense spending that America simply cannot afford. Despite America's dire financial straits, Senate Democrats demand that we spend money we don't have, have to borrow to get, and cannot afford to pay back," Brooks said in his statement.

And Brooks pointed to the potential damage of the budget deal for his north Alabama district - the home to Redstone Arsenal - as worse than a temporary government shutdown.

"In a national bankruptcy, the Constitution and federal statutes mandate that debt service and entitlement spending be paid first, leaving little, if anything, for national defense or NASA," Brooks said in his statement. "As such, in a national bankruptcy, the military and NASA would likely be zeroed out, thereby risking the lives of all Americans while, at a local level, doing great damage to the Tennessee Valley's economy."