After 41 days of federal workers going unpaid, government agencies shuttering and public pain mounting, the Senate approved a funding package on Monday night to reopen government, moving the country one step closer to ending the longest shutdown in American history.
But the lights in Washington aren’t back on just yet.
The legislation, approved in the Senate with the support of 52 Republicans and 8 Democrats, combines three full-year spending bills with a stopgap measure to keep the rest of the government funded through Jan. 30. The package also reverses mass layoffs triggered during the shutdown and blocks additional firings through the duration of the continuing resolution.
The bill passed the Senate 60-40, with those eight senators who caucus with the Democrats — Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., Dick Durbin, D-Ill., John Fetterman, D-Pa., Maggie Hassan, D-N.H., Tim Kaine, D-Va., Angus King, I-Maine, Jackie Rosen, D-Nev., and Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H. — joining all but one Republican, Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, to support the legislation.
While the bill to reopen government still has to pass the House — and then needs President Donald Trump’s signature — the Senate was the tallest hurdle. In fact, even getting senators to expedite consideration, after a critical number of Senate Democrats showed on Sunday that they would vote with Republicans, was its own obstacle.
“I am grateful that the end is in sight,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said on the floor on Monday. “But I would encourage every member of this body, Democrat or Republican, pro-bill or anti-bill, not to stand in the way of being able to deliver the coming relief quickly. The American people have suffered for long enough.”
Thune got his wish.
Senators agreed to speed up the process in their chamber on Monday in order to likely end the shutdown sometime in the next couple of days.
Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., told House Republicans on a members-only conference call Monday that he is aiming to clear the legislation on Wednesday, according to a source on the call who was granted anonymity to discuss the private plans. It will be the first day the House has held a legislative session since Sept. 19.
While House passage, of course, isn’t guaranteed, Republicans can advance the legislation without Democratic support. That’s a relief for House GOP leaders, since they are unlikely to draw more than a handful of votes from vulnerable Democrats in swing districts.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., has vowed to vote against the legislation and is pushing the rest of his caucus to oppose it as well, slamming the deal that a handful of Democrats crafted with Republicans because it omits any immediate action on Affordable Care Act subsidies.
In exchange for Democratic support, Thune agreed to allow a Senate vote on legislation to extend the expiring ACA subsidies. But he offered no assurances about the outcome, and the measure — which would require 60 votes to advance — is widely expected to fail.
Throughout the shutdown, Democrats insisted that any agreement to reopen the government include language addressing the expiring tax credits. They didn’t get that language — and lawmakers are now only one step away from solving the shutdown without addressing skyrocketing health care premiums.
If all House Democrats vote no on the funding bill, Republicans can only afford two GOP defections while still passing the legislation. But there’s another dynamic complicating passage in the House: attendance.









