Government shutdown to hit 1 week mark after Congress fails again to reach agreement
For the fifth time in a row, U.S. senators voted down both federal funding stopgap options, extending the ongoing government shutdown into its seventh day.
The vote Monday evening showed that most Democrats haven’t budged in their opposition to Republicans’ House-passed Continuing Resolution and are sticking to their own doomed spending bill instead.
Only Sens. John Fetterman, D-Pa.; Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev.; and Angus King, I-Maine, (who caucuses with Democrats) voted for both the Democratic and Republican CRs. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., voted no on both.
Republicans’ CR would extend government funding for seven more weeks, buying time for lawmakers to finish properly funding the federal government through the 12 annual appropriations bills.
However, Democrats argue the bill would “gut” health care because it fails to address the expiring pandemic-era enhanced Obamacare Premium Tax Credits. Their counterproposal includes a permanent extension of the enhanced PTC and other policy riders, costing up to $1.4 trillion.
Negotiations between party leaders have essentially frozen. Republicans are confident that as the shutdown drags on, enough Democratic senators will fold – despite no evidence of that happening anytime soon.
President Donald Trump, however, remains hopeful, telling reporters that there have been productive talks with some Democrats.
“We have a negotiation going on right now with the Democrats that could lead to very good things. And I’m talking about good things with regard to health care,” Trump said.
While Republican congressional leaders have said they will only sit down with Democrats about health care policy once the government opens, Trump indicated willingness to strike a deal now.
“If we made the right deal, I’d make a deal, sure,” the president said. “I’d like to see a deal made for great health care.” He also implied that any deal must entail reforms to Obamacare, not just a funding boost like Democrats want.
Even if Republicans’ CR ultimately passes without extra spending agreed to, it caps a bad fiscal record for Congress. Lawmakers never even passed a proper federal budget for the current fiscal year 2025, instead passing three continuous CRs to extend previous year’s funding and punt the shutdown deadline to Oct. 1.
It’s been almost seven years since the federal government last shut down.
Latest News Stories
Report: Teacher’s union gives nearly 2M to org that trains for May Day protests
Illinois Quick Hits: Downtown Chicago office vacancies hit another record high
Trump issues dire warning to Iran as deadline looms
Report: Iran, inflation concern small businesses
Meeting Summary and Briefs: City of Casey City Council for March 16, 2026
U.S.-Israel-Iranian conflict escalating global energy, supply chain crisis
Casey-Westfield Completes Wild Walk-Off Comeback to Edge Teutopolis 16-15
Trump endorses Hilton in California gubernatorial primary
Feds award $1M for Rose Bowl upgrade ahead of Olympics
Trump defends Section 122 in latest tariff legal challenge
Education department rescinds Title IX resolution agreements
Illinois gun owners plan rally in wake of Supreme Court order
Artemis II mission breaks records Monday as astronauts observe far side of the moon