Senators to work through the weekend on shutdown as Republicans and Democrats are still far apart
Senators remain divided on funding and Affordable Care Act subsidies as the shutdown impacts millions and a vote is expected soon, with GOP needing five more votes.
- The Senate is working through the weekend to resolve the government shutdown standoff, which has lasted 39 days.
- Republicans rejected an offer from Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer to reopen the government and extend healthcare subsidies for a year.
- A small group of moderate Democrats have proposed reopening the government in exchange for a future vote on healthcare.
38 Articles
38 Articles
US shutdown: Senators work through weekend as workers go unpaid for 2nd month, SNAP aid delayed, flights cancelled
US government shutdown: Democrat and Republican Senators are negotiating over health care subsidies, but bipartisan progress remains uncertain amid President Trump advocating for ending the filibuster to expedite the resolution.
US Senators to work through the weekend on shutdown as Republicans and Democrats are still far apart
US Senators are working through the weekend to end a month-long government shutdown. Bipartisan talks are ongoing, with moderate Democrats proposing a deal to reopen the government in exchange for a future vote on healthcare. Republicans have rejected an offer to extend healthcare subsidies, while some express openness to a compromise with new limits.
Senators to work through the weekend on shutdown as Republicans and Democrats are still far apart
Senators are working through the weekend for the first time since the government shutdown began more than a month ago, hoping to find bipartisan resolution that has so far eluded them as government workers have gone unpaid, airlines have been forced to cancel flights and SNAP benefits have been dela
How Democrats can win shutdown messaging war
Donald Trump holds the record for both the longest and second-longest government shutdowns in American history. Republicans control the White House, Senate and House — yet somehow, Democrats are at risk of losing the message war and letting voters believe…
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