Flight, Government Shutdown
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Shutdown Progress in Doubt
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Senate Dems to huddle to discuss shutdown
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President Trump, whose first term at the White House set the previous government shutdown record, said this one was a "big factor, negative" in the GOP's election losses Tuesday, again demanding Republicans end the Senate filibuster as a way to reopen the government.
The Federal Aviation Administration is gearing up to cut 10% of flights at 40 U.S. airports beginning Friday, Nov. 7, as air traffic controllers and TSA agents continue to go unpaid during the government shutdown.
Nearly every federal worker is going without pay, and no clear timeline for when that next paycheck will arrive.
Senate Democrats face pressures of their own, both from unions eager for the shutdown to end and from allied groups who want them to hold firm. Many see the Democrats’ decisive gubernatorial wins in Virginia and New Jersey as validation of their strategy to hold the government closed until expiring health care subsidies are addressed.
2hon MSN
House conservatives back new funding deal to end shutdown, reject 'wasteful' Obamacare subsidies
Some House Republicans are backing a funding bill extension to January 2026 as the government shutdown enters its 37th day.
The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services says it will distribute partial Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits to recipients this weekend, as directed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Food and Nutrition Service.
As the U.S. government shutdown enters its 37th day ( making it the longest in American history ), the Federal Aviation Administration ( FAA) has ordered the cancellation of 10 percent of flights at 40 major airports in the U.S.
Speaker Johnson, House GOP and the Republican Governance Group speak on Day 37 of the "Democrat shutdown."
As Pennsylvania waits on federal funding for LIHEAP, Shapiro announced a commitment from utility companies that heat will not be shut off.