Senate Passes Bill to End 41-Day Government Shutdown Amid Healthcare Battle

The US Senate has taken a major step toward ending the record-breaking government shutdown. Lawmakers approved a sweeping funding measure that now heads to the House for final approval. The bill would restore pay for thousands of furloughed federal workers and extend government operations through 2026. However, the compromise has created tension within Democratic ranks over healthcare benefits.

Key Points: US Senate Passes Bill to Reopen Government After 41-Day Shutdown

  • Bill extends government funding through January 2026 with full agency budgets
  • Restores pay and employment for thousands of furloughed federal workers
  • Eight Democrats crossed party lines to help advance the legislation
  • Republicans agreed to hold separate healthcare benefits vote by mid-December
2 min read

US Senate passes bill to reopen government, awaits House approval

Senate approves funding bill to end longest US government shutdown, restoring pay for federal workers and sending legislation to House for final approval.

"The American people have now awoken to Trump's health care crisis - Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer"

Washington, Nov 11

The US Senate approved a sweeping funding measure aimed at ending the 41-day government shutdown that has severely impacted federal agencies and disrupted millions of lives nationwide.

The bill now heads to the House of Representatives for approval before going to President Donald Trump for his signature.

The legislation extends government funding through January 2026 and provides full-year budgets for several key agencies. It also restores pay and employment for thousands of federal workers who were furloughed during the shutdown.

Senate leaders reached the final agreement after days of negotiations, following a Sunday vote in which eight Democrats crossed party lines to help advance the bill.

On Monday, too, the Senate voted 60-40 to reopen the federal government. As part of the compromise, Republicans agreed to hold a separate vote by mid-December on extending health care tax benefits, a key demand from Democrats.

The concession angered some in the Democratic base, who wanted the issue addressed directly in the bill.

"The American people have now awoken to Trump's health care crisis," Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said on Monday before voting against the legislation.

"Democrats demanded that we find a way to fix this crisis and quickly, but Republicans have refused to move an inch. So, I cannot support the Republican bill that's on the floor because it fails to do anything of substance to fix America's healthcare crisis," he added.

House Speaker Mike Johnson has called lawmakers back to Washington, signalling a possible vote later this week. Senate Republican leaders said they expect Trump to sign the legislation promptly once it reaches his desk, formally ending the shutdown.

The ongoing government shutdown, the longest in US history, has disrupted federal services, delayed payments, disrupted air travel, and strained the broader economy.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Interesting to see how US politics works. In India, such long shutdowns are rare. Their system seems more prone to these deadlocks. 🤔
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Michael C
The healthcare compromise seems like kicking the can down the road. Both parties should focus on actual governance rather than political point-scoring.
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Ananya R
This affects global markets too. As someone working in IT exports, I've been watching this closely. Hope stability returns soon! 📈
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Vikram M
Eight Democrats crossing party lines shows that sometimes common sense prevails over blind party loyalty. Good to see some bipartisan cooperation.
S
Sarah B
The air travel disruptions mentioned here affected my cousin's business trip last month. These shutdowns have real consequences for ordinary people.

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