Deal close in U.S. Senate to reopen government
A deal is close to being struck in the U.S. Senate to resume funding the federal government, indicating the end of the shutdown is close.
President Donald Trump confirmed Sunday evening, upon returning to the White House, that the upper chamber of Congress is “close” to a deal, a significant step forward in ending the longest government shutdown in history.
The deal comes after U.S. Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., refused to allow the Senate to recess ahead of the Veterans’ Day holiday, keeping the chamber in session throughout the weekend.
The shutdown, which began Oct. 1 at the beginning of the new federal fiscal year, had been increasingly impacting more and more Americans, including those receiving SNAP ( or food stamp) benefits, and air travelers.The country’s largest airports had been ordered to reduce the number of scheduled flights as staffing shortages increased because air traffic controllers and other workers were not being paid. Thousands of flights have been either cancelled or delayed in recent days as a result ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday.
The agreement reportedly does not include an extension of the Obamacare tax credits that were expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic, which was the major sticking point for Democrats who refused to vote for a U.S. House-passed Continuing Resolution that would temporarily fund the government at past levels.
This is a developing story.
Latest News Stories
Colorado’s only ICE detention center operator sues state
U.S. House fails to renew spy powers authority as World Cup begins
House panel opposes adding U.S. Supreme Court justices
Schools face bus funding, cost challenges
Ohio pulls 1,200 commercial truck licenses for immigration guidelines
First fugitive on FBI’s ‘Most Wanted Fraudsters’ list surrenders in Minneapolis
Pentagon on lockdown due to ‘hazardous materials incident’
Survey: Parents value life skills, support for school choice
‘Family Month’ backer cites biology, declining birth rates in defense of resolution
Supreme Court affirms Washington venue in falsification trial
Supreme Court rules against company lawsuit over unlawful regulations
Aldermen say lawmakers failed to address illegal cannabis sales near schools