It ran from Dec. 22, 2018 to Jan. 25, 2019, during the Trump administration. At 34 days, it was the longest government ...
Republicans would be wise to put their differences aside and work toward a solution, rather than hash out interparty issues ...
Lawmakers have until Sept. 30 to extend government funding. Internal Republican divisions are posing a problem for Speaker ...
The House is scheduled to vote Wednesday on Speaker Mike Johnson’s proposal that links the funding of the federal government ...
The U.S. House, including 14 Republicans, voted down a six-month GOP government funding plan Wednesday, as Speaker Mike ...
If Congress doesn't pass a spending bill by September 30, the government could shut down. Here's what that could mean.
House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., canceled plans Wednesday for a vote on a new government spending bill, 19 days before the ...
CNN is setting up President Donald J. Trump to take the blame for a government shutdown as Dems balk at an election security ...
The threat of a risky government shutdown is looming over the U.S. at a very sensitive political time for the country.
A handful of Republicans voted to derail Speaker Johnson's plan linking funding to a Trump-backed voter ID bill. The government will shut down on Oct. 1 unless Congress acts.
Monday marks the House and the Senate's first day back on Capitol Hill after a month-long summer break, and the clock is ticking with three weeks until government funding expires on Sept. 30.
Speaker Mike Johnson has pulled a government funding bill amid party dissent, risking a shutdown. The government will shut down on October 1 if no extension is passed, affecting federal operations.