Following Senate confirmation, the U.S. House of Representatives this Wednesday Ending the longest government shutdown in history country.
The shutdown lasted 43 days due to disagreements between Republicans and Democrats and affected things like payroll payments and domestic flights.
The House unanimously approved the Senate’s government reopening bill on Monday. 222-209six Democrats voted in favor and two Republicans voted against.
This measure will now be transferred to the Oval Office, where the President of the United States works. Donald Trump quotes reporters The agreement was signed in front of cameras at 9:45 p.m. local time (2:45 GMT, 11:45 p.m. Argentina time), ending the longest shutdown in the country’s history.
“History reminds us that government shutdowns never change the outcome, only the sacrifices made by the American people,” said Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), chairman of the Appropriations Committee. “In the past 43 days, the facts have not changed, the votes needed have not changed, and the path forward has not changed.”
Hardline Democrats criticized the approved bill for not including an extension of federal health care subsidies from Obamacare that are set to expire at the end of the year.
As the girlfriend of a New York Democratic Party member, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortezdeclared that the Trump administration committed “atrocities” against Americans during the shutdown, including attempting to cut off all federal funding for food stamps, which approximately 42 million residents depend on.
The bill approved by the House on Wednesday includes a spending package that will fund the government through January and three separate spending bills that will cover programs related to agriculture, military construction, veterans affairs, and legislative bodies through most of 2026.
Additionally, US media reported that the party had “secretly” added a clause that would allow the ruling party to sue the government for at least $500,000 because the party was investigated for the January 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol.
The package includes provisions to reverse federal employee layoffs made during the government shutdown and guarantee retroactive pay to furloughed employees.
Various federal agencies have asked employees in advance to return to work this Thursday, as the shutdown expires after President Trump signed it tonight.
Agency information available