The government shutdown is on track to extend into a third week. Congress remains deadlocked on a funding plan, and the Senate isn’t scheduled to hold any votes until Tuesday. Follow for live updates.
President Donald Trump said his administration has “identified funds” to pay military troops on October 15 as the government shutdown is headed into a third week. Follow for live news updates.
• Shutdown-related firings begin: More than 4,000 federal employees have been given layoff notices as the shutdown is ongoing, the Trump administration revealed in a court filing. President Donald ...
The federal government remains shut down after a deadlocked Congress failed again today to reach a funding deal.
The federal government shutdown is now nearing the one-week mark, with no end to the impasse in sight. Follow for live updates.
The federal government has officially shut down for the first time in six years after a deadlocked Congress failed to pass a ...
The government has now been shut down since October 1, with no end in sight. While the House has passed a stopgap bill that ...
Bondi continuously deflected questions from Democrats on controversial issues, including the Jeffery Epstein files, prosecution of former FBI Director James Comey and legal rationale for using the ...
• Stalemate continues: The government has been shut down for more than a week, and Congress still appears deadlocked. The Senate today again failed to advance two competing spending proposals from ...
• No votes tonight: The Senate won’t vote on any government funding bills this evening. That means the shutdown will continue into tomorrow, when another round of votes on proposals to reopen the ...
The last shutdown started on December 22, 2018, and went until January 25, 2019 — 35 days, making it the longest government shutdown.
The federal government enters day two of a partial shutdown as Congress failed to pass a funding measure. Meanwhile, the White House said federal workforce layoffs are “imminent. Follow for live ...