Guided by a bipartisan deal struck in October, President Barack Obama and congressional Republicans have settled most of their differences over 2016 spending by government agencies. With Republicans dominating bill details, the departments of Veterans Affairs, Justice and Defense will get the healthiest increases, while Housing and Urban Development and the Environmental Protection Agency won't do as well. Republicans want to block new Obama administration emissions standards for power plants, thwart a rewrite of clean water rules, prevent curbs on "fracking" on federal lands and limit new ozone regulations. In exchange, Democrats want a permanent extension of tax breaks for solar and other alternative energy sources. Reacting to last month's Paris attacks, Republicans want to include a House-passed bill restricting Syrian refugees trying to enter the U.S.