November 13, 2025
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Trump signs bill ending 43‑day shutdown; funding extended through Jan. 30

President Trump signed a stopgap funding bill Wednesday night that officially ended the 43‑day government shutdown, sending to law a continuing resolution that funds remaining agencies through Jan. 30, folds in three full‑year appropriations, reverses shutdown‑era firings with guaranteed back pay and restores full funding for SNAP and other key programs. The deal excludes an extension of Affordable Care Act premium subsidies (Republicans pledged a December vote on that), drew bipartisan defections and sharp Democratic opposition, and leaves a patchwork timeline for states to restore SNAP payments in the coming days.

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📌 Key Facts

  • President Trump signed a stopgap funding bill that ended a record 43‑day government shutdown and extended funding for remaining agencies through Jan. 30, allowing Congress more time to finish FY2026 appropriations.
  • The roughly 394‑page package folds in three full‑year FY2026 appropriations (Agriculture; Military Construction‑VA; and the Legislative Branch) and was designed to avoid a December omnibus by extending the continuing resolution to Jan. 30.
  • The bill restores full funding for USDA food‑assistance programs (including SNAP), with reporting that SNAP is funded for the remainder of the budget year (some outlets specifying through Sept. 2026) and language reimbursing states that kept SNAP/WIC running during the shutdown.
  • The measure reverses shutdown‑era firings of federal workers, guarantees back pay for furloughed employees, and bars additional reduction‑in‑force (RIF) actions while the CR is in effect.
  • Senate leaders advanced the deal on a 60–40 procedural vote after eight Democrats joined Republicans; the House then passed it 222–209 and sent it to the president. Several prominent Democrats, including Senators Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith, voted against the measure because it omitted an ACA subsidy extension.
  • The bill does not extend Affordable Care Act premium tax credits; GOP leaders pledged a separate floor vote (targeted for mid‑December) but Democrats warned premiums could spike for millions if credits expire and remain skeptical of that promise.
  • SNAP benefit timing will vary by state: USDA said funds could be available to most states within 24 hours of reopening, but operational hurdles — especially for states that already issued partial November payments — mean many states may take several days to a week to restore full benefits; about 19 states and D.C. had briefly issued full November payments during a court‑ordered window earlier in the shutdown.
  • The shutdown produced wider disruptions and political pressure — including warnings about potential air‑travel chaos if controllers missed pay, presidential threats to halt SNAP payments, and public pressure on air‑traffic controllers — all of which factored into the urgency and negotiations that produced the deal.

📚 Contextual Background

  • A 2019 law requires furloughed federal employees to receive back pay after a government shutdown ends.
  • Essential federal functions generally continue during a shutdown, including border protection, law enforcement, air traffic control and power grid maintenance.

📰 Sources (22)

Republicans promised health care negotiations after the shutdown, but Democrats are wary
Twin Cities by Associated Press November 13, 2025
New information:
  • House Speaker Mike Johnson called the ACA subsidies a "boondoggle" and President Trump called the ACA a "disaster" after the shutdown bill signing.
  • Sen. Jeanne Shaheen says Senate Republicans (via John Thune) committed to drafting a mid‑December bill and "serious effort" to extend credits; Democrats remain skeptical.
  • Senate Democrats floated a one‑year extension plus a bipartisan committee during the shutdown; Thune rejected it as a "nonstarter."
  • House Democrats have proposed a three‑year extension; no House commitment from Johnson.
  • Up to 24 million exchange enrollees could see premiums rise Jan. 1 if credits expire.
States scramble to send full SNAP food benefits to millions of people after government shutdown ends
Twin Cities by Associated Press November 13, 2025
New information:
  • USDA indicated SNAP funds could be available to states within 24 hours of reopening, though loading to EBT cards varies by state.
  • Examples of state timelines: West Virginia expects full November benefits by Friday; Illinois plans to complete restorations by Nov. 20; Colorado is switching from partial to full payments as early as Thursday; Missouri awaits USDA guidance to finish November payouts.
  • AP notes a patchwork of distributions before reopening, with about two‑thirds of states having issued only partial or no benefits.
President Trump signs government funding bill, ending shutdown after a record 43-day disruption for country
Twin Cities by Associated Press November 13, 2025
New information:
  • President Trump signed the funding bill Wednesday night, officially ending the 43‑day shutdown.
  • House passed the measure 222–209; the Senate had passed it Monday.
  • Funding for remaining agencies is extended through Jan. 30; three full‑year bills are enacted.
  • Bill reverses shutdown‑period firings, protects federal workers from layoffs through January, and guarantees back pay.
  • USDA/food assistance programs are funded for the rest of the budget year; $203.5 million included to boost lawmaker security.
  • Republicans pledged a mid‑December vote on ACA marketplace subsidy extensions; no guarantee of passage.
  • Deal was brokered by eight senators after Democrats’ subsidy extension was excluded.
The timeline for SNAP benefits remains uncertain, even after Congress agrees to end the shutdown
Twin Cities by Associated Press November 13, 2025
New information:
  • The House adopted the plan to reopen government and restart SNAP and sent it to President Trump for signature.
  • USDA says SNAP funds could be available 'within 24 hours for most states' once government reopens; some states may take longer.
  • AP tally: at least 19 states and D.C. issued full November SNAP benefits to some recipients during a brief court‑ordered window before a Supreme Court stay.
  • Operational outlook: many states can issue full benefits within about three days after the go‑ahead, while some could take up to a week; states that issued no November benefits yet may be quickest.
  • Technical complication: states that already issued partial benefits may face hurdles loading the remaining amounts onto EBT cards.
Government to reopen after 43 days: US House sends bill to Trump ending record shutdown
Minnesota Reformer by Jennifer Shutt, Ariana Figueroa, Shauneen Miranda November 13, 2025
New information:
  • House vote was 222–209; the White House said President Trump will sign the bill at 9:45 p.m. ET on Nov. 12.
  • The Senate‑reworked package is 394 pages, folds in three full‑year appropriations bills, and extends the CR to Jan. 30 (from Nov. 21).
  • List of cross‑party House votes: Democrats Henry Cuellar, Don Davis, Jared Golden, Adam Gray, Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, and Tom Suozzi voted for passage; Republicans Thomas Massie and Greg Steube voted against.
  • Senate Majority Leader John Thune pledged a floor vote on a Democratic health‑care bill by the second week of December.
  • Quotations framing the debate: Appropriations Chair Tom Cole said shutdowns 'never change the outcome'; Ranking Member Rosa DeLauro warned premiums could double or triple for more than 20 million Americans.
House returns for vote to end the government shutdown after nearly 2 months away
Twin Cities by Associated Press November 12, 2025
New information:
  • House returns after nearly eight weeks away; vote scheduled Wednesday and Speaker Mike Johnson may need near‑perfect GOP attendance due to expected Democratic opposition.
  • The bill reverses firings of federal workers during the shutdown, protects against further layoffs through January, and guarantees back pay.
  • Full‑year funding for the Agriculture Department is included, ensuring key food assistance programs continue without interruption through the rest of the budget year.
  • Democrats oppose the measure because it omits an extension of Affordable Care Act premium tax credits; eight Senate Democrats broke with their caucus to advance the bill.
  • Shutdown is at Day 43; potential travel delays tied to the shutdown could complicate House attendance.
US Senate on verge of passing bill to end record-breaking shutdown, House up next
Minnesota Reformer by Jennifer Shutt November 11, 2025
New information:
  • Senate expected to hold final passage vote before midnight on Nov. 10 to end the record-length shutdown.
  • President Trump said he will 'abide by the deal' and highlighted reinstatement of thousands of federal workers who received layoff notices.
  • House Speaker Mike Johnson told members to return to D.C. immediately for a House vote once the Senate sends the bill, citing flight delays/cancellations and unpaid, overworked air traffic controllers.
  • Trump separately posted that air traffic controllers must return 'NOW,' threatened to 'dock' those who took time off, and floated $10,000 bonuses for those who did not — adding pressure amid MSP and national disruptions.
  • The stopgap extends funding through Jan. 30, giving Congress time to finish remaining full‑year appropriations.
The shutdown could end this week. Here’s what that might mean for Minnesotans.
Eleanor Hildebrandt November 10, 2025
New information:
  • Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith did not support the emerging legislation, citing concerns over delayed ACA tax-credit action.
  • The Senate was close to a vote Monday with House action still required; the package includes back pay for furloughed federal workers.
  • The deal would fund SNAP through September 2026.
Speaker Johnson says House will return to Washington for voting on shutdown deal
Twin Cities by Associated Press November 10, 2025
New information:
  • Speaker Mike Johnson told House members to return to Washington “right now” to take up the shutdown-ending package.
  • The 60–40 Senate procedural vote followed switches by a small group of Democrats; three named were Jeanne Shaheen, Maggie Hassan, and Independent Angus King.
  • John Thune reaffirmed a mid-December vote on ACA subsidies while noting outstanding GOP concerns, including a potential Rand Paul objection over a hemp-products provision.
  • President Trump has not committed to signing but said the shutdown’s end appears close.
What’s in the legislation to end the federal government shutdown
Twin Cities by Associated Press November 10, 2025
New information:
  • Package explicitly ensures states will be reimbursed for money spent to keep SNAP and WIC running during the shutdown.
  • Confirms three full‑year appropriations attached: agriculture and military construction/Veterans Affairs (VA) among them.
  • Notes eight Democrats joined Republicans on the 60–40 procedural vote; Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer voted no.
  • Sets timeline: Senate could pass the bill as soon as Monday; House members told to prepare to return.
  • Guarantees a December vote on ACA subsidy extension rather than resolving it in this bill.
  • Includes back pay assurance for furloughed federal workers after prior uncertainty.
Klobuchar, Smith vote against proposal to reopen federal government after historic shutdown
Alpha News MN by Luke Sprinkel November 10, 2025
New information:
  • Confirms Minnesota Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith voted against advancing the continuing resolution.
  • Provides Klobuchar’s direct quote: she opposed the bill because it did not prevent premium spikes for Minnesotans.
  • Lists the specific Democrats who crossed the aisle to vote with Republicans (Durbin, Hassan, Rosen, Fetterman, Shaheen, Cortez Masto, Kaine) and notes independent Angus King’s vote and GOP Sen. Rand Paul’s 'no' vote.
  • Cites assurance from Senate Majority Leader John Thune about scheduling a vote on ACA subsidies and rehiring furloughed federal workers.
End to government shutdown in sight after senators make funding deal
Alpha News MN by Therese Boudreaux November 10, 2025
New information:
  • Senate voted 60–40 to advance a shutdown-ending continuing resolution Sunday night.
  • Republican leaders promised a vote on extending the enhanced ACA Premium Tax Credits as part of the deal.
  • The CR is paired with a minibus covering three FY2026 appropriations: MILCON–VA; Agriculture/FDA/Rural Development; and the Legislative Branch.
  • Deal language includes reversing some Trump administration Reduction-in-Force (RIF) actions during the shutdown and bars new RIFs while the CR is in effect.
  • CR would extend funding through Jan. 30 to avoid a December omnibus and allow time for regular-order appropriations.
  • On-record quotes from Sens. Dick Durbin and John Fetterman acknowledging the deal and its impacts.
Senate moves toward compromise legislation to end government shutdown
Twin Cities by Catie Edmondson, Michael Gold November 10, 2025
New information:
  • The Senate voted 60–40 to advance the compromise bill to reopen the government, with eight Democrats joining Republicans.
  • Senate Majority Leader John Thune committed to a December vote on extending ACA premium subsidies, though the current bill does not include the extension.
  • Sen. Tim Kaine highlighted language reversing shutdown-era layoffs and guaranteeing back pay for furloughed employees.
  • Both of Minnesota’s U.S. senators voted against advancing the measure.
Minnesota’s U.S. senators call potential deal ‘a mistake’ as Senate votes on plan to end shutdown
Eleanor Hildebrandt November 10, 2025
New information:
  • Minnesota Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith both oppose the emerging Senate deal because it omits an extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies.
  • Klobuchar warned premiums could double for many Minnesotans and said she voted against the bill.
  • Smith stated she will not support the bill, calling it a mistake for failing to help Americans afford health care.
  • Rep. Angie Craig and Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan also criticized the deal publicly, urging Democrats not to accept it without health-care concessions.
Deal to end shutdown gains traction in US Senate as vote nears
Minnesota Reformer by Ashley Murray November 10, 2025
New information:
  • Senate leaders released text of a stopgap funding bill to keep the government open until Jan. 30.
  • The deal would reinstate all federal employees fired during the shutdown with back pay and bar further layoffs until the CR expires.
  • Package includes three FY2026 full-year appropriations (agriculture, veterans/military construction, and Congress).
  • Unlocks full-year funding for SNAP (serving ~42 million Americans).
  • No ACA subsidy extension in the bill; GOP leaders commit to a separate vote by the second week of December.
  • Positions from key lawmakers: Sens. Blumenthal, Van Hollen, Baldwin, Schumer, and Rep. Andy Kim say they’ll vote no; Sen. Tim Kaine supports; Minnesota U.S. Rep. Angie Craig says she’d vote no in the House.
Trump signals no shutdown compromise with Democrats as senators hold a rare weekend session
Startribune November 08, 2025
New information:
  • Senate holds a rare weekend session for the first time since the shutdown began to seek a bipartisan resolution.
  • President Trump publicly rejects Democrats’ demand to extend ACA tax credits, suggesting direct payments instead.
  • Senate Majority Leader John Thune says Trump's proposal won’t be part of an immediate solution but keeps Senate in session until shutdown ends, aiming for a vote as soon as possible.
  • Moderate Democrats, led by Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, float a plan to reopen government now with only a promise of a later vote on ACA subsidies, not a guarantee.
  • Talks include funding select parts of government (food aid, veterans programs, legislative branch) and extending the rest into December or January.
  • Republican leaders need approximately five more votes; the moderate Democratic group has ranged from 10–12 senators.
  • House Speaker Mike Johnson declines to commit to a future health care vote; some Republicans open to subsidy extensions but with tighter eligibility limits.
Longest government shutdown in history continues as Klobuchar stands by Schumer plan
Alpha News MN by Luke Sprinkel November 07, 2025
New information:
  • Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer offered to end the shutdown if Republicans back a one-year extension of ACA subsidies.
  • Sen. Amy Klobuchar backed Schumer’s offer on the Senate floor, calling it 'a practical plan.'
  • Senate Republicans publicly rejected the offer, framing it as '$35 billion next year to insurance companies' with 'no fraud controls.'
  • A potential 15th Senate vote on the GOP CR was uncertain as of Friday, with talk of amending it to extend funding into January.
  • President Trump urged ending the Senate filibuster to pass funding with a simple majority; Majority Leader John Thune said there aren’t enough votes to do so.
Democrats consider prolonging the shutdown as Republicans prepare new bills without health care fix
Twin Cities by Associated Press November 07, 2025
New information:
  • Senate Majority Leader John Thune kept the Senate in session and readied a bipartisan package for a test vote as soon as Friday.
  • The proposal would fund specific areas (food aid, veterans programs, the legislative branch) and extend overall government funding only until Nov. 21.
  • Democrats have voted 14 times against reopening without an extension of expiring ACA subsidies; Republicans remain about five votes short.
  • Moderate Democrats, led by Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, have explored a deal to reopen now in exchange for a future vote on health‑care subsidies.
  • Trump urged Republicans to end the shutdown, calling it a 'negative' factor for the GOP in recent elections.
Government shutdown becomes the longest on record as fallout spreads nationwide
Twin Cities by Associated Press November 05, 2025
New information:
  • The shutdown reached Day 36, becoming the longest on record.
  • No talks scheduled with Democrats; Trump refusing to negotiate on expiring health-insurance subsidies until government reopens.
  • Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy warned of potential chaos in U.S. air travel next week if controllers miss another paycheck.
  • AP reports the administration restricted SNAP food aid despite court orders intended to ensure funds are available.
  • Senate Majority Leader John Thune called it the 'most severe shutdown on record' and said 'Shutdowns are stupid.'
  • Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar urged negotiations in a late-evening floor speech.
A defiant Trump vows no SNAP payments until Democrats cave on shutdown
Minnesota Reformer by Jacob Fischler November 04, 2025
New information:
  • Specific Trump post stating no SNAP payments until Democrats reopen government.
  • White House press secretary’s statement that the administration is complying with the court order.
  • Plaintiffs’ filing to compel full benefits and proposal to use the child‑nutrition account to cover November SNAP.
  • Judge McConnell scheduled a Thursday hearing and ordered a government response.
  • USDA cited administrative hurdles that could delay partial payments by months.

+ 2 more sources