The federal government remains stuck in partial shutdown mode, with the House pushing a crucial funding vote to Tuesday. And here's the problem: nobody seems particularly excited about passing this thing.
House Delays Government Funding Vote as Shutdown Drags On

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The Deal Nobody Loves
The funding package on the table was negotiated by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and President Donald Trump. It would keep most federal agencies running through the end of September, but here's where it gets weird: the Department of Homeland Security only gets two weeks of funding. That short-term DHS provision is where everything falls apart.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and his Democratic caucus aren't playing ball. Jeffries informed House Speaker Mike Johnson that Democrats won't agree to expedite the bill, effectively delaying the vote. Democrats want specific conditions attached to DHS funding, including requirements that Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials wear body cameras, end roving patrols, and follow tighter parameters for search and arrest warrants.
Internal Republican Troubles
Johnson faces headaches from his own party too. Some GOP members aren't thrilled with the spending package, creating internal defections that make passage uncertain even if Democrats came around. The bill needs to clear a procedural hurdle first, and the House Rules Committee is set to meet Monday to hash that out before it reaches the full chamber.
What This Means
Since this is only a partial shutdown, with fully funded agencies staying open while others close, the immediate economic pain is contained. But if this drags on, the disruption could escalate. The vote Tuesday will signal whether Washington can find any common ground, or whether we're in for a prolonged standoff that affects government operations, public services, and potentially the broader economy.
The whole mess underscores just how divided Washington remains, with implications for every legislative battle ahead.
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