Narrow Passage to End U.S. Government Shutdown
U.S. House narrowly passed a procedural hurdle for legislation to end the government shutdown, with a vote expected later. The bill funds key sectors and extends Homeland Security funding, supported by President Trump, but faces Democrat opposition demanding changes to immigration enforcement.
In a critical move, the U.S. House of Representatives narrowly passed a procedural hurdle on Tuesday for legislation aimed at ending the ongoing government shutdown. This sets the stage for a decisive vote on final passage within the day.
The proposed legislation would ensure funding for vital sectors, including defense, healthcare, labor, education, and housing, extending temporary support to the Department of Homeland Security. The bill, endorsed by President Donald Trump, previously passed the Senate with broad bipartisan support, yet faced tighter margins within the Republican-majority House, clearing the procedural hurdle by a slim 217-215 vote.
Republican leaders faced challenges rounding up necessary votes as all 214 Democrats opposed the bill, demanding new curbs on aggressive immigration enforcement following recent incidents. An expedited resolution to the shutdown, which started on Saturday, would prevent significant disruptions to government services and avert economic losses, given the previous 43-day shutdown cost the U.S. an estimated $11 billion.
(With inputs from agencies.)
- READ MORE ON:
- government
- shutdown
- U.S.
- legislation
- House
- Trump
- Democrats
- immigration
- economy
- funding
ALSO READ
Trump's Call to 'Nationalize' Elections Sparks Controversy
House Passes $1.2 Trillion Spending Bill to Avert Government Shutdown
Historic Meeting: Trump and Petro Seek Common Ground Amid Clashing Ideologies
U.S. House Approves Deal to End Partial Government Shutdown
Trump's Call to 'Nationalize' Elections Draws Bipartisan Pushback

