US Government Reopens After Record 43-Day Shutdown—Trump to Sign Bill

The United States Congress has officially ended the longest government shutdown in history. President Trump will sign the funding bill from the Oval Office in a televised ceremony. The legislation passed with strong Republican support despite some internal party disagreements. Government operations will resume immediately while lawmakers prepare for upcoming budget battles.

Key Points: Congress Ends Record US Government Shutdown Trump to Sign

  • Bill passed by House vote of 222-209 with nearly all Republican support
  • Ends longest government shutdown in US history after 43 days
  • Sets new funding deadline of January 30 for ongoing negotiations
  • Six Democrats crossed party lines to support the Republican-backed measure
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US Congress passes funding bill to end record 43-day govt shutdown; Trump to sign from Oval Office

US Congress passes funding bill ending 43-day government shutdown. President Trump to sign legislation from Oval Office, reopening federal operations immediately.

"I was shocked by it; I was angry about it - House Speaker Mike Johnson"

Washington, November 13

The United States Congress on Wednesday (local time) approved the federal funding package to reopen the government after a record 43-day shutdown, sending the bill to President Donald Trump for his signature.

The President will be signing the funding bill on camera from the Oval Office, as per the White House.

According to CNN, the measure ends the longest-ever government shutdown in US history, following weeks of bitter political deadlock over an Obamacare-related programme opposed by Republicans.

After the bill was passed by the US Senate earlier this week, the US House of Representatives passed the funding bill by a vote of 222 to 209, with nearly all Republicans and a handful of Democrats voting in favour.

The legislation ensures that government operations resume immediately and sets up a new funding deadline of January 30, although several key programmes--including SNAP, WIC, and veterans' services--will remain funded through the end of fiscal year 2026, as reported by CNN.

Six Democrats have crossed party lines to back the bill, including Representatives Jared Golden, Adam Gray, Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, Henry Cuellar, Tom Suozzi, and Don Davis.

Meanwhile, Republican Representatives Thomas Massie and Greg Steube voted against it.

While the bill averts further disruption to essential services, most Democrats expressed frustration over its failure to secure an extension of expiring enhanced health care subsidies that help Americans pay for insurance premiums, as reported by CNN.

US House Speaker Mike Johnson managed to unite most Republicans behind the measure, despite internal backlash over a controversial Senate provision that allows senators to sue the US Department of Justice for obtaining their phone records during a Biden-era investigation -- potentially yielding payouts exceeding USD 500,000 or more per violation, CNN reported.

"I was shocked by it; I was angry about it," Speaker Johnson said, as quoted by CNN, adding that he was unaware of the language until after the Senate passed the bill. Johnson vowed to revisit and remove the provision in a future House vote.

With the government reopening, lawmakers now face a packed legislative calendar before year-end, including decisions on expiring Obamacare subsidies, the farm bill, and energy credits, as per CNN.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Interesting to see how US politics works. In India, such long shutdowns are unimaginable. The provision allowing senators to sue DOJ seems problematic though - could set a dangerous precedent. 🤔
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Sarah B
Good that essential services will resume, but disappointed they couldn't secure the healthcare subsidies extension. Many American families depend on those. Hope they address this in the next session.
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Arjun K
The political drama in US Congress reminds me of our own parliamentary sessions sometimes! 😅 At least they've reached a temporary solution. The January 30 deadline will be here before we know it.
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Michael C
Speaker Johnson saying he was "shocked" by the Senate provision seems hard to believe. How can the House Speaker not know what's in such a critical bill? This shows lack of proper coordination between chambers.
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Kavya N
At least veterans' services and food programs are secured till 2026. That's a relief for vulnerable populations. Hope they can work more efficiently on the remaining issues before year-end. 🙏

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