← NewsAll
House nears passage of bill to end partial government shutdown
Summary
The House cleared a procedural hurdle and is expected to vote soon on a bill that would end the partial government shutdown and fund most agencies through Sept. 30.
Content
The House has narrowly cleared a procedural hurdle and is nearing final passage of a bill to end a partial government shutdown. If passed, the measure would fund most federal agencies through Sept. 30 and includes a short-term patch for the Department of Homeland Security through Feb. 13. Leaders said a final House vote is expected soon after GOP leaders secured the procedural step with a close party-line tally.
What is known:
- The House cleared a procedural vote that allows a final passage vote to proceed.
- The bill would end the partial shutdown that began Saturday and fund most agencies through Sept. 30, while temporarily extending Department of Homeland Security funding to Feb. 13.
- Speaker Mike Johnson and other Republican leaders said they won near-unanimous conference support to move the measure after late discussions with holdouts.
- President Donald Trump said he would sign the bill if it reaches his desk.
Summary:
If the House approves the bill in its expected vote, it would end the current partial shutdown and restore funding for most federal programs. The immediate next step is the final House passage vote; further negotiations remain on Homeland Security funding and related measures.
