A divided Congress escapes one shutdown to face another
That herculean task would be difficult in the best circumstances, but is much more challenging after lawmakers spent the last 43 days criticizing each other instead of building the types of trust that are usually needed for large deals.
At the same time, congressional leaders will try to wrap up work on the nine full-year government funding bills that were supposed to become law before
The two-track negotiations will push party leaders to compromise on issues they'd rather not, especially as next year's November midterm elections inch closer. Early signs were not good.
House Speaker
"We currently have 433 members of the
While Senate Majority Leader
President
Pessimism over progress
The shutdown highlighted the stark differences
Now that it's over,
Connecticut Rep.
"We have two parties here, two sides," DeLauro said. "In the past … we've had serious negotiation back and forth, and that's what we need to do, and that's not happening."
While
DeLauro did not rule out another shutdown, saying
Maryland Democratic Rep.
Hoyer said that scheduling decision was a clear "indication they're not interested in solving the problem."
"If they were, they would have had members here working on appropriation bills," Hoyer said. "And the only way you're going to ultimately solve this problem is to pass appropriation bills."
Hoyer said the real question facing
Untangling spending bills
The spending package that reopened the government included three of the dozen full-year bills, funding the
The remaining appropriations bills will be considerably tougher to resolve, especially because the
The Defense, Homeland Security, Labor-HHS-Education and State-Foreign Operations bills will be some of the more difficult to settle.
Washington Democratic Rep.
"My constituents are already telling me that they're making that choice between having health insurance or having a house to live in, and they're going to choose the house," Jayapal said.
Whether or not a partial government shutdown begins in early 2026 will likely depend on whether Republican lawmakers from swing districts force bipartisanship on a health care bill.
"I really don't know," Jayapal said. "I think it depends on these vulnerable


Health coverage, cost trends serving double whammy in Mass.
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