The House on Friday easily passed legislation pairing $15.25 billion in funding for the Hurricane Harvey relief effort with provisions raising the debt ceiling and funding the government through early December.

Lawmakers voted 316 to 90 to send the bill to President Donald Trump for his signature, a day after the Senate approved the measure 80-17.

The bill's $15.25 billion in aid nearly doubles the amount provided by the original House bill passed earlier this week, adding an additional $7.4 billion in community development block grant funds to the $7.4 billion already included for the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Another $450 million is slated to go to the Small Business Administration's disaster loan program.

The package also increases the national debt limit – allowing the government to continue to pay its bills – funds the government with a continuing resolution, and extends the National Flood Insurance Program, all through Dec. 8.

All 90 no votes in the House and 17 nays in the Senate came from Republicans. Lawmakers in the party were displeased that the Harvey relief was bundled with the short-term debt-ceiling hike and government-funding measures through a deal struck by President Donald Trump and Democratic leaders, and that the emergency aid did not come offset with cuts elsewhere.

The smaller, standalone aid package had passed the House 419 to 3 on Wednesday.

According to Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, Trump was eager to present a unified front in response to Harvey – which made landfall in Texas as a Category 4 hurricane last month – and the impending arrival of Hurricane Irma, which appears poised to strike Florida this weekend.