President-elect of the United States Donald Trump at an event in Arizona. Photo Source: Gage Skidmore (Flickr)

Govind Tekale

‘Total Capitulation,’ Schumer Says After Senate Votes 60-40 to End 40-Day Shutdown

Democratic Party Politics, Government Shutdown, Trump Administration, U.S. Politics

Government Shutdown Deal: Complete Breakdown

Understanding the Government Shutdown Deal

On November 9, 2025, after 40 consecutive days of closure—the longest government shutdown in U.S. history—the U.S. Senate voted 60 to 40 to advance legislation designed to reopen federal agencies and resume critical services. This procedural vote marked the first step toward ending a fiscal impasse that left approximately 42 million Americans without food assistance benefits, federal workers without paychecks, and air traffic systems operating below capacity. For more coverage on federal workforce impacts and policy responses, explore Trump administration policy updates and political developments. For official legislative documentation, see the U.S. Senate and Congress.gov resources.

40 Days: The Longest Shutdown Ends—But Not Yet

A bipartisan Senate agreement advances, setting the stage for government reopening through late January 2026.

Record-Length Closure
40
Days Closed
60-40
Senate Vote
42M
Americans on SNAP
Jan. 30
Expected Deadline

What the Deal Includes

The Senate-advanced package is structured as a short-term continuing resolution with provisions for full-year appropriations on select measures. The following elements are included based on the deal framework and member statements:

Government Funding

Funding expected through late January 2026 for most federal agencies via a continuing resolution. Three appropriations bills (Military Construction–Veterans Affairs, Agriculture–Food and Drug Administration, and Legislative Branch) are expected to receive full-year funding through September 30, 2026.

SNAP Benefits

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program will receive full-year funding through September 30, 2026, ensuring approximately 42 million Americans maintain access to food assistance. See USDA Food and Nutrition Service for current benefit details.

Back Pay for Federal Workers

Federal employees furloughed during the shutdown are guaranteed back pay under the Government Employee Fair Treatment Act of 2019. This law mandates retroactive pay as soon as possible after appropriations lapse end, regardless of scheduled pay dates.

Protection Against Layoffs

Language in the agreement reverses any reductions in force (RIFs) that occurred during the shutdown and provides protections against additional RIFs through the end of fiscal year 2026. This addresses concerns from senators representing large federal workforces.

Healthcare Vote Pledge

While not included in the legislative text, the deal includes a Republican commitment to hold a Senate vote on extending Affordable Care Act premium tax credits by the second week of December. Democrats will draft the bill language. The vote is not binding.

Air Traffic & Aviation

Once enacted, air traffic controllers and TSA staff resume regular paychecks. System recovery will occur gradually as the FAA manages existing staffing shortages and operational challenges. Learn more at Federal Aviation Administration.

Timeline: The Path to a Deal

The shutdown began when Congress failed to enact a funding bill by October 1, 2025. The House passed H.R. 5371 on September 19, but the Senate did not advance it until the November 9 cloture vote. Here’s how the impasse unfolded:

1
September 19, 2025
House Passes Continuing Resolution
The House passes H.R. 5371, a short-term continuing resolution funding the government through November 21, 2025. The measure funds government at FY2025 levels and extends certain expiring authorizations.
2
October 1, 2025
Shutdown Begins
No funding bill is enacted. The government enters a lapse in appropriations. Senate Democrats block multiple cloture attempts on H.R. 5371 to pressure Republicans on extending Affordable Care Act premium tax credits. Both parties blame the other for the impasse.
3
October–November
Shutdown Becomes Historic
By November 5, the shutdown surpasses 35 days, breaking the previous record set in December 2018–January 2019. Federal workers miss paychecks. SNAP benefits face uncertainty. Air traffic controllers and TSA staff work without compensation, creating operational strain.
4
Early November
Cracks in Democratic Unity
Moderate Democrats begin to question the shutdown strategy. Senator John Fetterman (D-Pa.) publicly voices concern about leverage, noting the impact on SNAP recipients. Some senators signal Republicans’ willingness to allow a December vote on healthcare subsidies as a compromise.
5
November 9, 2025
Senate Deal Announced & Voted
A group of eight Democrats and one Independent senator reach an agreement with Senate Republican leadership. The Senate votes 60-40 to invoke cloture and proceed to the amended bill. See coverage of Trump administration actions during shutdown.

The Senate Vote: Who Backed the Deal

On November 9, 2025, at approximately 9:50 p.m. ET, the Senate voted 60-40 to invoke cloture on the motion to proceed to H.R. 5371. This procedural vote was the first critical step toward reopening the government. The Senate website maintains the official vote record.

60 Senators
Voted to proceed (including 8 Democrats and 1 Independent)

The following eight Democrats and one Independent crossed party lines or aligned with the deal:

John Fetterman
Pennsylvania (D)
Most vocal critic of extended shutdown. Emphasized impact on SNAP recipients and risk to air traffic safety.
Catherine Cortez Masto
Nevada (D)
Warned that continued shutdown harms tens of thousands of military personnel and impacts state economy.
Jacky Rosen
Nevada (D)
Supported compromise after securing a Republican concession to vote on healthcare subsidies drafted by Democrats.
Dick Durbin
Illinois (D)
Senate Democratic Whip. Focused on impact to federal workers forced to work extended hours without pay.
Jeanne Shaheen
New Hampshire (D)
Led negotiations as senior member of Senate Appropriations Committee. Secured Democratic control over December healthcare vote language.
Maggie Hassan
New Hampshire (D)
Worked closely with Shaheen to negotiate reopening and noted families’ deep pain about shutdown’s impact in New Hampshire.
Tim Kaine
Virginia (D)
Represents 140,000 federal workers in Virginia. Focused on securing backpay protections and preventing additional RIFs.
Angus King
Maine (I)
Independent who caucuses with Democrats. Cited concern that prolonged shutdown handed additional power to Trump administration.

Who Opposed: Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) voted no, as did many other Senate Democrats who remained committed to securing healthcare subsidies before reopening. Senator Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) also opposed the deal.

What Lawmakers Said

“I have long said that to earn my vote, we need to be on a path toward fixing Republicans’ health care mess and to protect the federal workforce. This deal guarantees a vote to extend Affordable Care Act premium tax credits, which Republicans weren’t willing to do. Lawmakers know their constituents expect them to vote for it, and if they don’t, they could very well be replaced at the ballot box by someone who will.”
Senator Tim Kaine (D-Virginia) – Official Statement
“This agreement gives Democrats control of the Senate floor — at a time when Republicans control every level of power — on one of our top legislative priorities: Extending the enhanced premium tax credits to make health care more affordable for millions of Americans.”
Senator Jeanne Shaheen (D-New Hampshire) – Official Press Release
“This legislation will protect federal workers from baseless firings, reinstate those who have been wrongfully terminated during the shutdown, and ensure federal workers receive back pay, as required by a law I got passed in 2019. That’s an essential step that will help federal employees and all Americans who rely on government services.”
Senator Tim Kaine (D-Virginia) – Official Statement
“I think it’s a terrible mistake. The American people want us to stand and fight for healthcare.”
Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Massachusetts) – Statement on the Deal

What Happens Next: The Remaining Steps

The November 9 Senate vote was procedural—it allowed debate to proceed and set the stage for passage. However, several steps remain before the government fully reopens:

1
Additional Senate Votes
The Senate continues voting. After cloture, remaining Senate votes require only a simple majority. Any single senator can slow post-cloture timing through procedural mechanisms.
2
House Returns & Votes
The House of Representatives, in recess since September 19, must return to Washington and vote on the Senate-approved bill. Leadership is coordinating timing for return.
3
Presidential Signature
Once both chambers pass the bill, it goes to President Trump for signature. Trump is expected to sign the measure to end the shutdown.
4
Government Reopens
Upon enactment, federal agencies return to normal operations. Federal workers resume regular paychecks. SNAP benefits resume processing. Air traffic resumes normal capacity.
5
December Healthcare Vote
By the second week of December, the Senate is expected to vote on extending Affordable Care Act premium tax credits. Democrats drafted the bill language. Passage is not guaranteed.

Important Context & Caveats

Healthcare Subsidies: No Guarantee

The deal provides a Senate vote on extending ACA premium tax credits, but Republicans are not required to support it. If credits expire on January 1, 2026, health insurance premiums on ACA marketplaces could increase significantly. Over 20 million Americans use these subsidies.

Democratic Party Divided

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer opposed the deal, as did many other Senate Democrats. House Democrats have also indicated opposition. This reflects deep disagreement over the shutdown strategy within the party.

Back Pay: How It Works

The Government Employee Fair Treatment Act of 2019 mandates back pay for furloughed federal workers. “Excepted” workers (those required to work without pay) also receive back pay for hours worked. Payment occurs as soon as possible after shutdown ends.

Legislative Process Verification

The exact funding dates and bill composition will be confirmed when the Senate posts its amendment text to H.R. 5371. Until that text is filed and published on Congress.gov, specific funding end dates remain pending.

SNAP Funding Path

Full SNAP funding through September 2026 depends on the Agriculture–Food and Drug Administration appropriations bill being included. If included as expected, the approximately 42 million SNAP recipients will maintain benefits. See USDA Food and Nutrition Service for program details.

Air Travel Recovery Timeline

Once the shutdown ends, air traffic controllers and TSA staff resume regular operations. However, the FAA faces structural staffing shortages that predate the shutdown. System capacity will recover gradually as operations normalize.

Official Sources & Further Reading

For official documentation, government statements, and legislative records, refer to these first-hand sources:

Senate Procedural Records

U.S. Senate Official Website – Vote records, member statements

Legislative Text

H.R. 5371 (Congress.gov) – Full text as passed by the House

SNAP & Food Assistance

USDA Food and Nutrition Service – Current SNAP guidance and updates

Federal Workforce Guidance

Office of Personnel Management (OPM) – Furlough and back pay procedures

Healthcare Subsidies

HHS ASPE – Affordable Care Act subsidy analysis

Aviation & Air Traffic

Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) – Air traffic updates and status

Back Pay Law

Government Employee Fair Treatment Act of 2019 – Statutory text on back pay

Vote Record & History

Senate Roll Call Vote 119-1-00610 – Official vote record

Closing Summary

After 40 days—the longest government shutdown in U.S. history—a bipartisan group of nine senators (eight Democrats and one Independent) reached an agreement with Senate Republican leadership and the White House on November 9, 2025. The Senate voted 60-40 to advance the package. The deal provides for government funding into late January 2026, full-year funding for select appropriations bills, full SNAP benefits through September 2026 if the Agriculture bill is included as expected, back pay for furloughed federal workers under the 2019 statutory framework, reversal of workforce reductions enacted during the shutdown, and protections against additional RIFs through fiscal year 2026. A Republican commitment to hold a December vote on extending Affordable Care Act premium tax credits—drafted by Democrats—is included as an informal agreement but is not binding legislation. The bill still requires Senate passage, House approval, and a presidential signature before the government resumes normal operations. For related policy coverage, see CruxBuzz politics coverage and Trump administration updates.

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