U.S.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) holds a copy of the Continuing Appriations and Extensions Act as he speaks during a press conference, accompanied by Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-LA) and other fellow Republicans, on the first day of a partial government shutdown, at the U.S.
Capitol, in Washington, D.C., U.S., October 1, 2025.
Nathan Howard | ReutersThe Senate on Thursday is set to vote for a seventh time to try to end the government shutdown, as the stalemate on Capitol Hill continues with no sign of a breakthrough.Now in its ninth day, more of the shutdown's widespread impacts on the government are starting to emerge.
The IRS, for instance, said Wednesday that it was furloughing nearly half of its workforce as a result of the congressional funding lapse.Still, lawmakers on both sides remain dug in, showing no indication that they are open to yielding on their demands.The Senate is expected to vote at around 11:30 a.m.
ET on dueling Republican and Democratic posals to end the government shutdown.Republicans, who hold a narrow majority in the Senate, need eight votes from the Democratic caucus in order to pass their short-term funding bill in the upper chamber, where 60 votes are required for passage.In the last round of voting on Wednesday, the GOP bill was rejected 54-45, while the Democrats' version fell short in a 47-52 tally.Read more CNBC government shutdown coverageTrump suggests not all furloughed workers will get back pay: ‘It depends’Republicans face pressure to consider Democrats' health care demands as shutdown drags onFunding bill falls short again in Senate, extending government shutdownThe shutdown meant no jobs report.
Carlyle's analysis shows it would have been pretty badMissing this pay date may be too much for Trump and Congress to long shutdownThe shutdown meant no jobs report.
Here's what it would have said the economyDemocratic leader Jeffries challenges GOP House Speaker Johnson to debate shutdown'There will start to be layoffs' if Trump decides shutdown talks have stalled, Hassett saysTrump could 'start taking sharp measures' if next government funding bills fail: HassettAffordable Care Act premiums will rise 114% in 2026 if subsidies expire: KFFTrump admin freezes $2.1 billion for Chicago jects, blames Democrats for shutdown holdupShutdown fallout: Energy Dept.
axes billions for green jects in blue statesTrump administration cancels nearly $8 billion in climate funding to blue states: VoughtGovernment shutdown : Stalemate to last at least three daysTrump touts shutdown as 'unprecedented opportunity' to cut more Democratic prioritiesGovernment shutdown fight hinges on ACA tax credits — and if some immigrants should getThis is news.
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