Government shutdown live updates as Senate holds 9th vote to fund government

by Marcelo Moreira

 

2m ago

Senate begins 9th vote on advancing GOP funding bill

The Senate is taking the ninth procedural vote on advancing the House-passed GOP funding bill to end the shutdown. The eighth vote failed to reach the 60 votes needed to advance on Tuesday.

There are no signs that the underlying dynamic has changed. Republicans need to win over five more Democrats to move the bill forward, a number that stayed the same since the start of the shutdown.

 

11:54 AM

Jeffries says “House Republicans need to get back to work”

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York speaks at a news conference on the government shutdown outside the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 15, 2025.

Alex Wong / Getty Images


House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries railed against House Republicans for staying away from Washington amid the shutdown, gathering House Democrats for a news conference outside the Capitol as the party puts pressure on House GOP leaders to call the chamber back into session.

“House Democrats are here, reporting for duty,” Jeffries said. “We are ready, we are willing and we are able to negotiate a bipartisan spending agreement that actually meets the needs of the American people, reopen the government and decisively address the Republican health care crisis.”

But the New York Democrat stressed that “we also need a common sense partner on the other side of the aisle.”

“House Republicans shut the government down, then they ran out of town. And for the last three weeks, they’re nowhere to be found,” Jeffries said. 

He said House Democrats are fighting to lower the cost of living, to fix “our broken health care system” and to “clean up corruption.”

“It’s time to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits, it’s time to prevent tens of millions of Americans from experiencing dramatically increased health care premiums. It’s time to make sure that every single American can afford to go see a doctor when they need one. It’s time to reopen the government and stand by our hard-working, patriotic federal workers and it’s time to do all of that right now,” Jeffries said. “No further delay — House Republicans need to get back to work.”

 

10:39 AM

Thune says conversations between senators on shutdown off-ramp are happening, but Dems are “dug in”

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, asked by reporters whether there are conversations between any members on a shutdown exit ramp, said “there are.”

But the South Dakota Republican said Democrats are “dug in,” arguing that Saturday’s “No Kings” protests mark a “threshold issue for them.”

“I’m hoping that in some of their conversations they’ll get sort of more realistic,” Thune added.

Thune also indicated that Senate Republicans are hoping to include a package of appropriations bills in a procedural vote on the full-year Defense Department spending bill slated for Thursday.

“I think the goal is to see what the traffic will bear in terms of additional bills,” Thune said. “We would like to put together a package, like we did last time on the floor, which will take consent, and if we can get on Defense appropriations, which we’ll vote on tomorrow, then we can start that negotiation process.”

Asked whether he expects the government to remain closed until full-year funding bills are passed, Thune said “I certainly hope not.”
“Shutdowns are not good for anybody, and the sooner we end it the better,” Thune said. 

 

10:34 AM

Johnson says troops could miss full paycheck at the end of the month if shutdown continues

House Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana speaks at a news conference on the government shutdown at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 15, 2025.

House Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana speaks at a news conference on the government shutdown at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 15, 2025.

Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images


Speaking at his daily press conference at the Capitol, Speaker Mike Johnson took aim at Democrats over the continuing shutdown, saying members of the military are in danger of missing their next paycheck later this month if the funding lapse continues.

Johnson said the Trump administration’s move to pay service members on Wednesday using other funds is a “temporary fix.”

“If it weren’t for the bold leadership of President Trump helping us to protect our military, everybody needs to understand that 1.3 million active duty service members would be missing a paycheck,” Johnson said. “They’ll get their check, thankfully, because President Trump has shown strong leadership.”

He blamed Democrats for refusing to vote for the House-passed continuing resolution.

“If the Democrats continue to vote to keep the government closed as they have done now so many times, then we know that U.S. troops are going to risk missing a full paycheck at the end of this month,” the speaker said. “And that means service members on deployment who’ve left their young families back home, reliant upon these checks, it means service members who are thousands of miles away from home, it means service members trying to make their rent and those who have ailing relatives who need to be taken care of — none of those people will be paid if the Democrat obstruction continues. And it should outrage every American.”

 

10:16 AM

Thune says Democrats are “dug in” and focused on “pleasing their far-left base”

Speaking on the Senate floor, Majority Leader John Thune said Democrats “are dug in.”

“Fifteen days into a government shutdown, Democrats show no sign that they’re ready for it to end. Not even the prospect of military families going without a paycheck was enough for Democrats to reopen the government,” the South Dakota Republican said. “Nor are Democrats concerned about needy families uncertain about the future of nutrition assistance, or Americans in flood zones who are unable to update their insurance or close on a home in the midst of hurricane season. No, Democrats are dug in. And all those Americans living in uncertainty — well, they’re just going to have to wait until Democrats’ far-left base is satisfied.”

He added: “The truth is that what Democrats really want is something Republicans can’t give them — and that’s the approval of their far-left base.”

Thune said that Democrats are motivated by “pleasing their far-left base and preserving their political careers.”

“We’ll have another opportunity later today to vote on that bill sitting right at the desk,” Thune said, pointing to the Senate rostrum. “Five more Democrats, it passes. It goes to the White House, gets signed into law by the president and the government opens up. Will today be Day 15 of Democrats’ shutdown? Or will it be the day we reopen the government and get back to the business of serving the American people?”

 

10:05 AM

What’s on the Senate’s schedule today

The Senate convened at 10 a.m. for morning business, with senators making 10-minute speeches on various topics. You can watch a live feed of the Senate floor in the player at the top of this page.

The chamber will stand in recess from 12:30 p.m. to 2:15 p.m. for both parties’ weekly conference meetings. Senators will vote on the House-passed continuing resolution after those meetings, according to Majority Whip John Barrasso’s office.

 

9:41 AM

Why Senate votes to end the government shutdown keep failing

Senate Democrats and Republicans remain deadlocked after failing for the eighth time to pass a GOP-led measure that would end the government shutdown on Tuesday. CBS News’ Taurean Small has more details:

Why Senate votes to end the government shutdown keep failing

02:26

 

Updated 8:58 AM

Military to receive paychecks today despite shutdown

Members of the military are set to be paid today at the direction of President Trump, while other federal workers go without paychecks until the government reopens.

Mr. Trump said in a post on Truth Social over the weekend that he was directing Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to “use all available funds to get our Troops PAID on October 15th.”

“We have identified funds to do this, and Secretary Hegseth will use them to PAY OUR TROOPS. I will not allow the Democrats to hold our Military, and the entire Security of our Nation, HOSTAGE, with their dangerous Government Shutdown,” Mr. Trump said. 

Around $8 billion in funds from the previous fiscal year had been identified to cover the mid-month paychecks, according to a Pentagon official. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem also said Coast Guard personnel will also receive paychecks. 

The Oct. 15 deadline for military paychecks had been widely viewed as a possible off-ramp in the shutdown, exerting pressure on both sides to come to the table to avoid forcing service members to miss their paychecks. But military pay will continue to be an issue for lawmakers, since the president’s actions only cover the Oct. 15 paychecks. Some in Congress have been pushing for standalone legislation to pay the military.

 

Updated 8:58 AM

Thune sets up separate vote on Defense Department funding bill

Senate Majority Leader John Thune is trying an alternate approach to restart some funding, by setting up votes on regular-order appropriations bills. On Tuesday evening, he teed up a vote on the full-year Defense Department appropriations bill, setting up a possible procedural vote for Thursday.

Thune’s move marks a departure from the series of failed votes on the stopgap measure to fund the government into next month. It puts pressure on Democrats, who have said they support work on the regular appropriations process, though they’re at odds with Republicans over how to keep the government funded in the short term. 

Thune told reporters last week that he’d be willing to hold votes on standalone bills to fund parts of the government, including the defense bill, as the impasse over the shutdown continues.

 

Updated 8:58 AM

Senate expected to vote for 9th time on House-passed measure to fund the government

The Senate is expected to vote again this afternoon on the House-passed measure to fund the government, after the measure fell short for an eighth time Tuesday evening. 

While Republicans have been hoping to pick up new support from Democrats on the measure, the bill has failed to gain any new votes from across the aisle since before the shutdown began. There are 53 Republicans in the Senate, but because most legislation requires 60 votes to advance in the upper chamber, Republicans need support from Democrats to reopen the government.

Democratic Sens. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania and Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada have supported the measure, along with Sen. Angus King, a Maine independent who caucuses with Democrats. GOP Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky has voted against the bill.

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