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Democrats split in bid to end longest US shutdown: Senate moderates strike deal with GOP

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After 40 grueling days of the longest government shutdown in US history, Senate Democrats have fractured their united front to broker a breakthrough deal.

A coalition of moderate Democrats, led by Senators Jeanne Shaheen and Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire and independent Angus King of Maine, reached a bipartisan agreement with Republicans and the White House on Sunday evening to reopen federal agencies.

The deal extends funding through January 30, 2026, fully restores food stamp benefits for 42 million Americans, and reinstates furloughed federal workers.

In exchange, Democrats secured a Republican promise for a Senate vote on extending Affordable Care Act subsidies by mid-December, though passage remains uncertain.

The breakthrough cloture vote passed 60-40 on Sunday night, with eight Senate Democrats splitting from party leadership to back the measure.

While the agreement signals relief for shuttered agencies and stranded workers, it represents a strategic retreat from Democrats’ initial demands for guaranteed healthcare protections.

Democrats capitulate on key priority, settle for future vote

Senate Democrats arrived at a painful crossroads over the weekend.

Their leadership, particularly Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, had insisted for weeks that no government reopening bill could pass without a concrete extension of enhanced Obamacare subsidies expiring December 31.

Those tax credits make healthcare affordable for millions of low-income Americans. Republicans flatly refused to negotiate on healthcare while the government remained closed, creating an impasse that reached its fortieth day by Sunday.

The moderate Democratic contingent ultimately blinked first. Senators Dick Durbin of Illinois, Tim Kaine of Virginia, Maggie Hassan, Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada, Jeanne Shaheen, Jacky Rosen of Nevada, and John Fetterman of Pennsylvania broke ranks with their party.

They calculated that accepting a future vote, rather than a binding commitment represented progress worth the political price.

Tim Kaine articulated the pragmatic thinking behind the split:

I have long said that to earn my vote, we need to be on a path toward fixing Republicans’ health care mess and to protect the federal workforce.

Under the agreement, all federal employees receive back pay, and the Trump administration commits to no additional layoff notices through January.

Democrats also won provisions fully funding food assistance and veterans programs through fiscal year-end—small victories after capitulating on healthcare.

What’s at stake for millions of Americans

The stakes couldn’t be higher right now. More than 42 million Americans have gone without food assistance during the shutdown.

Across the country, federal workers are stuck in limbo, some sent home without pay, others forced to keep working for free.

Airports are bracing for massive delays, with up to 10% of flights expected to be cut. Even Head Start programs for low-income kids have had to close their doors. Every day this drags on, the economic damage just keeps piling up.

Politically, things are just as intense. The Senate’s deal could completely shift the balance of power heading into 2026, but it’s not a done deal yet as House Speaker Mike Johnson still has to sign off on it.

On the left, progressives are furious. Congressional Progressive Caucus Chair Greg Casar called any agreement without real healthcare protections a “betrayal.”

And over in the Senate, Republicans aren’t exactly eager to play along. John Thune has already dodged questions about whether the GOP will actually follow through on their December healthcare vote.

So for now, everything hangs on one question: will Republicans keep their word, or let millions of Americans face higher premiums right as the holidays hit?

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