White House, Senate and layoffs
Digest more
senate, government and shutdown
Digest more
Get live updates from Capitol Hill as Republicans and Democrats in Congress scramble to avoid a government shutdown.
The first government shutdown in nearly seven years began at midnight after lawmakers failed to reach a deal on extending funding.
The U.S. government is under its first federal government shutdown in almost seven years as Senate Democrats have voted down a Republican bill to keep funding the government.
The government shutdown is in its third day on Friday with senators set to vote for the fourth time on bills to fund the government. But with negotiations appearing stalled, it’s looking like the shutdown could extend through the weekend.
Last week, the White House Office of Management and Budget told federal agencies to consider layoffs, or reductions-in-force, if the government shuts down — an unusual move since government workers are usually sent home without pay during a shutdown, rather than laid off permanently.
Live from Senate floor as Congress faces a deadline to adopt a spending measure and prevent a federal government shutdown.
Senate Democrats kept their promise to reject any Republican spending bill that didn’t extend or restore health care benefits, choosing instead to force a government shutdown
Trump threatens mass layoffs after Senate fails to agree last-ditch funding plan - Republican funding bill fails in Congress on Tuesday evening, leading to the first government shutdown since Donald T