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Congress is nearing a final vote to end a short-lived, partial government shutdown

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By Sam Gringlas House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., speaks with reporters following a rules vote on funding the U.S.
− government
+ government,
at the U.S. Capitol
− February 3, 2026
− in
+ on
− Washington,
+ Feb.
− DC.
+ 3.
Aaron Schwartz/Getty Images
− North America
hide caption The House has approved a more than $1 trillion spending package that brings to an end the partial government shutdown. The legislation passed by a vote of 217 to 214, with 21 Democrats joining Republicans in
− support of the measure.
+ supporting.
The
− Senate passed the package on
− Friday
+ measure,
− and
+ which
President Trump
− has
+ signed
− endorsed
+ into
− the
+ law
− plan. The
+ shortly
− measure
+ after passage,
funds several of the government's largest departments through the end of the fiscal year in September. This includes the Pentagon and the Department of Health and Human Services, as well as the
− Department
+ departments
of Transportation,
− the
Education
− Department
and Housing and Urban Development. The spending agreement also includes a stopgap measure to fund the Department of Homeland Security through
− February
+ Feb.
13. Lawmakers are aiming to use that 10-day window to negotiate changes to federal immigration enforcement in the wake of the deaths of Renee Macklin Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis last month. Democrats are calling for several reforms, including body-worn cameras, forbidding officers from hiding their identities and requiring judicial warrants for enforcement operations. While there is bipartisan support for body-worn cameras, Republicans have voiced resistance to other Democratic demands, signaling a difficult stretch ahead for negotiations. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., and other top Republicans have already signaled that another short-term homeland security bill will be needed. Even without another stopgap measure,
− President
Trump's immigration crackdown will continue. Congress gave Immigration and Customs Enforcement $75 billion over four years in the Republican tax and spending bill passed last year. Before the second deadly shooting by immigration officers in Minneapolis, the last of the federal funding bills was on track to sail through Congress with bipartisan support. Lawmakers were eager to avoid another lapse in funding following
− a
+ the
− record-long
+ record-long,
43-day federal government shutdown last fall. That shutdown ended with lawmakers coming to an agreement on funding measures for a few parts of
+ the
government through September and passing only a short-term extension through the end of January for everything else, roughly 75% of annual
− non-discretionary
+ nondiscretionary
spending. Democratic appropriators praised the final spending package for staving off the deep funding cuts
+ that
the Trump administration had requested. For example, the administration
+ had
called for slashing the budget
− for
+ of
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention by some 50%. The final legislation keeps the agency's funding essentially flat. The House passed those final measures and sent them to the
− Senate last
− week.
+ Senate.
After the second deadly shooting in Minneapolis, Senate Democrats pledged to withhold votes for the funding measures without
− reforms
+ reforms,
and even some Republicans expressed alarm about the tactics in Minnesota. In the eleventh hour, Senate Democrats reached a deal with the White House to separate funding for most of the government from the homeland security spending bill. But with the House in recess last week and unable to sign off immediately, parts of the federal government ran out of money. Even with House members back in Washington this week, the deal between the Senate and the White House appeared tenuous in the House, where Republicans have a paper-thin majority. Sponsor Message Become an NPR sponsor