Monday, November 10, 2025 - The US Senate has made significant progress towards ending the longest US government shutdown in history, voting on the first procedural step on the measure.
After a weekend of negotiations in Washington, a minority of
Democrats joined with Republicans on Sunday, November 9, and voted in favour of
an agreement.
The 60-40 vote to take the first step toward ending the
shutdown came hours after enough Democrats agreed to support a package that
would fund multiple agencies and programs for the full fiscal year, and all
others until Jan. 30, 2026.
In exchange, Democrats have a commitment from the Trump
administration to rehire government workers fired at the start of the funding
lapse, and the promise of a Senate floor vote in December on legislation to
extend expiring Obamacare tax credits.
In the end, eight members of the Senate
Democratic Caucus voted Sunday night, to advance the House-passed stopgap,
which is being used as a vehicle for the larger funding deal.
The vote will pave the way for consideration later this week
of a legislative package that would fund the Department of Agriculture and the
FDA, the Department of Veterans Affairs and military construction projects, and
the operations of Congress for all of current fiscal year — the product of
months of bipartisan, bicameral negotiations between top appropriators.
All other agencies would be funded through Jan. 30,
according to the text of a continuing resolution released Sunday. The agreement
still needs to pass the House before the government can be reopened.
“After 40 long days, I’m hopeful we can bring this shutdown
to an end,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune said shortly before the vote.
The framework to end the shutdown was negotiated by Thune
and members of the Senate Democratic Caucus, including Sens. Angus King, Jeanne
Shaheen and Maggie Hassan. Rank-and-file Republicans were also at the
negotiating table, alongside members of the Senate Appropriations Committee
including Chair Susan Collins.
The breakthrough came 40 days into the shutdown.
As part of the deal, Democratic negotiators agreed to ensure
at least eight members from their caucus would approve procedural motions to
advance the government funding package. There are still additional steps before
the Senate can pass the funding deal, but Sunday’s vote sent a strong signal
that Senate GOP leaders now have the necessary support in their chamber to pass
legislation to end the longest shutdown in history
Following the vote late Sunday, Thune said it “remains to be
seen” how quickly the Senate will be able to get to a final vote on the
spending deal, including if senators will agree to yield back time Monday. Paul
wants a vote to remove hemp language as part of the three-bill minibus and a
“guarantee,” according to Thune, that the amendment will be successful.
Thune also cited concerns among three conservatives’ senators — Mike Lee, Ron Johnson and Rick Scott — who delayed voting on the procedural measure because they wanted to talk about the “overall budget process.” Johnson, according to Thune, also had shutdown-related legislation that he wants a vote on

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