Government shutdown: House will vote on Senate deal ASAP, Speaker Johnson says

Government shutdown: House will vote on Senate deal ASAP, Speaker Johnson says


US Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, Republican from Louisiana, speaks during a news conference on day 41 of the federal government shutdown, at the US Capitol on November 10, 2025, in Washington, DC.

Saul Loeb | Afp | Getty Images

House Speaker Mike Johnson on Monday called for House members to begin traveling to Washington, D.C., so that they can vote as soon as possible on a Senate deal that would end the longest U.S. government shutdown in history.

Johnson, R-La., spoke to reporters a day after the Senate narrowly approved the first stage of the deal to reopen the government, which shut down on Oct. 1.

To end the shutdown, the House needs to pass any deal that survives Senate votes. President Donald Trump would then have to sign it into law.

Johnson indicated to reporters that he expected votes in the House to occur this week, but he did not state a specific day.

The speaker said he would issue an official 36-hour notice before the House votes.

Johnson said, “There’ll be long days and long nights here for the foreseeable future to make up for all this lost time that was imposed upon us.”

Johnson has kept the House out of session since it passed a continuing resolution in September to fund the government through mid-November.

The Senate deal, forged over the weekend, drew support from seven Democrats and one independent who caucuses with Democrats, which, combined with 52 Republican senators’ votes, was enough to reach a 60-vote threshold to pass.

The deal does not include what had been the key demand for Democrats: an extension of enhanced Affordable Care Act tax credits, which are due to expire at the end of December.

But the agreement, for the first time since the shutdown began, includes a guarantee by Republicans of a vote in December on a bill chosen by Democrats to extend those subsidies, which more than 20 million Americans use to reduce the cost of health insurance plans purchased on ACA marketplaces.

Read more CNBC government shutdown coverage

The Senate deal would fund the government through the end of January; reverse all shutdown-related layoffs of federal employees; guarantee that all federal workers will be paid their normal salaries during the shutdown; and include provisions for a bipartisan budget process and preventing the White House from using continuing resolutions to fund the government.

It would also fund, through September, the SNAP program, which helps feed 42 million Americans through food stamps.

Under a federal law passed in 2019, government employees who are furloughed during a shutdown must be paid for the time they were out of work at their standard rate of pay “at the earliest date possible, regardless of scheduled pay dates.”

This is developing news. Check back for updates.



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