Senate rejects competing bills to fund government, increasing risk of shutdown on Oct. 1
The Senate rejected both the Trump-backed and Democratic stopgap bills, increasing the risk of a government shutdown as current funding expires Sept. 30, with a 44-48 vote against the GOP measure.
- The House of Representatives passed a short-term spending bill by a vote of 217-212, but it was rejected in the Senate by a vote of 44-48.
- If a shutdown occurs, federal workers will go unpaid until a spending plan is enacted.
- Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer stated that Republicans would own a government shutdown, emphasizing the need for negotiation.
- Democrats indicated that Republicans would own a potential government shutdown.
97 Articles
97 Articles
Senate Rejects Bills That Would Prevent Shutdown
The Senate rejected competing measures on Friday to fund federal agencies for a few weeks when the new budget year begins on Oct. 1, increasing prospects for a partial government shutdown on that date. Leaders of the two parties sought to blame the other side for the standoff, reports the...
The CR Didn't Pass, Government Shutdown Looms October 1
The Trump endorsed CR failed in the Senate. John Fetterman voted with Republicans but Rand Paul and Lisa Murkowski voted with Democrats. This is what Donald Trump was hoping to avoid. Republicans who didn’t vote: Banks (R-IN), Blackburn (R-TN), Cassidy (R-LA), Johnson (R-WI), Lee (R-UT), Mullin (R-OK), Scott (R-SC), and Sullivan (R-AK). The Senate blocked […] The post The CR Didn’t Pass, Government Shutdown Looms October 1 appeared first on www.…
US government shutdown looms, as Senate rejects stopgap funding bill
The threat of a US government shutdown surged on Friday, as the US Senate rejected a short-term funding bill to keep federal agencies operating after September 30 and then left town for a week-long break. The lawmakers voted 44-48 to defeat a stopgap spending bill that would have kept federal agencies operating at current funding levels through November 21. The measure faced near-universal opposition from Democrats, who demanded increased health…
Shutdown risk grows as rebel Republicans block spending bill in Senate
The Senate failed to advance a short-term spending bill on Friday, falling short of the necessary 60 votes required to move forward, inching the country closer to a government shutdown.A procedural vote on the stopgap spending bill ended in a 44-48 tally, far short of the threshold. Just one Democra...
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