Live

Government shutdown updates: Senate vote marks step towards ending federal shutdown

The bill advanced by a vote of 60-40.

Last Updated: November 9, 2025, 11:48 PM EST

President Donald Trump on Sunday offered a bit more insight into his proposal that Obamacare subsidies should go directly to Americans' Health Savings Accounts to pay for health care rather than sending funds to insurance companies through the Affordable Care Act.

Meanwhile, the Senate voted Sunday night on a test vote that would fund the government through Jan. 31 and end the 40-day government shutdown, the longest in U.S. history. Enough Democrats voted to pass the bill.

And the Department of Agriculture in a late Saturday night memo ordered states to reverse any steps they've taken to issue SNAP benefits and threatened to impose financial penalties on states that do not “comply” quickly.

Nov 08, 2025, 4:15 PM EST

Senate not expected to take votes on Saturday

The Senate is not expected to take any votes on Saturday, according to GOP leadership aides.

The Senate floor has been open since noon. The biggest action of the day has been speeches, including from Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer.

-ABC News’ Allison Pecorin

Nov 08, 2025, 2:54 PM EST

Schumer says GOP dismissal of Dem funding plan is a 'terrible mistake'

Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said on the Senate floor Saturday that it’s a "terrible mistake" for Republicans to dismiss his proposal to reopen the government with a one-year extension of government funding.

Republicans have called the proposal a "non-starter.”

"I know many Republicans stormed out the gate to dismiss this offer, but that's a terrible mistake," Schumer said. “Our offer is not a new policy. This is not negotiating in a shutdown. It is simply agreeing to maintain current funding levels.”

He said Republicans are refusing to even acknowledge the healthcare issues.

"It's alarming that Republicans even refuse to acknowledge we have an immediate crisis right now that needs fixing," Schumer said.

Schumer continued to criticize Republicans for the damaging effects of the record-shattering shutdown, blaming Republicans for delays and cancelations at airports and for ongoing issues with SNAP.

He also said the administration displayed "pathological levels of vindictiveness" by taking the case about paying out SNAP benefits to the Supreme Court.

Houston residents line up in their cars for a special free food distribution by the Houston Food Bank at the NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas, on Nov. 1, 2025.
Mark Felix/AFP via Getty Images

"This morning tens of millions of Americans remain in limbo as this administration continues its crusade against SNAP,” Schumer said. “The Supreme Court has allowed the administration to withhold benefits as the case makes its way through the lower courts. For this administration to go all the way to the Supreme Court just to get out of having to pay SNAP benefits for hungry kids is pathological levels of vindictiveness.”

He said the SNAP issue is "in the administration's hands."

"The minute the administration wanted to, it could find a fix for SNAP and ensure that people don't go hungry,” Schumer said.

Schumer also called the massive airport cancelations "transparently political.”

"What's happening at America's airports right now is not an accident -- it's a stunt,” he said.

-ABC News’ Allison Pecorin

Nov 08, 2025, 2:17 PM EST

Thune affirms Dem proposal is 'non-starter,' says short term funding bill is 'only way out'

In remarks on the Senate floor on Saturday, Majority Leader John Thune called the Democratic proposal presented by Minority Leader Chuck Schumer a "non-starter.”

The plan, which Schumer outlined on the Senate floor on Friday, would have seen Democrats approving a short-term extension of government funding if Republicans agreed to include a one-year extension of the Affordable Care Act tax credits.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer speaks on the floor of the Senate in Washington, Nov. 7, 2025.
Senate TV

"The Democrat leader's proposal is a non-starter for the Republican majority,” Thune said. “The Democrat leader wants to believe that this is a quote simple proposal. That it is some sort of compromise. But it is not. He is talking about throwing tens of billions more tax payer dollars at a program that even democrats admit has failed to lower health care costs.”

Senate Majority Leader John Thune speaks to members of the press as he heads to his office in the Capitol Building on Nov. 8, 2025, in Washington, D.C.
Aaron Schwartz/Getty Images

Republicans have consistently said they want to make reforms to Obamacare. They've also said they're unwilling to negotiate on the ACA until the government is reopened.

"Republicans are not about to further burden taxpayers by blindly extending a flawed program,” Thune said. “The Democrat's proposal is just more of the same: Masking rising premiums and padding insurance companies’ profits with more taxpayer dollars.”

However, Thune did say that the proposal presented by Schumer on Friday suggests that Democrats may be ready to engage on reopening the government.

Thune continued to assert that passing the clean short term funding bill remains the "only way out" of the shutdown.

-ABC News’ Allison Pecorin

Nov 08, 2025, 1:17 PM EST

Thune says discussion on ACA funds won't happen until after government reopens

After President Donald Trump suggested that the Senate should redirect Affordable Care Act funds away from insurance companies and "directly to the people,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune dodged giving any specific indication on how this would happen, but said it’s a conversation that the Senate would like to engage in only after the government is reopened.

"I think what's clear -- which is what's been clear all along -- that it is not going to be part of reopening the government,” Thune said. “It is a discussion that the president and all of us want to have. And I think he is now focused in on it and wants to have a solution to the healthcare crisis in this country, which is skyrocketing premiums. And so, you know, but that's got to -- that'll happen after the government reopens.”

Senate Majority Leader John Thune speaks to reporters on day 37 of the government shutdown, at the US Capitol in Washington, November 6, 2025.
Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Thune has repeatedly insisted that Senate Republicans would not negotiate on healthcare until the government is funded.

-ABC News’ Allison Pecorin

Related Topics

Sponsored Content by Taboola