NEWS
Donald Trump Signs Bill to End the Longest U.S. Government Shutdown
November 12, 2025, President Trump signed a government-funding bill, bringing to an end a 43-day shutdown that wreaked havoc across federal services.
The U.S. House of Representatives passed the legislation by a vote of 222-209.
The measure had already cleared the Senate, paving the way for Trump’s signature.
The funding deal restores pay and jobs for hundreds of thousands of federal employees, restarts food-aid programs, and reopens major government functions including air traffic control.
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Key Provisions & Impacts
The bill funds the majority of government operations through January 30, 2026.
Select full-year appropriations were also included (e.g., Agriculture, Military Construction, the Legislative Branch) despite the partial stand-still.
The shutdown had far-reaching effects: air travel disruptions, delays in benefit payments, unpaid federal workers, and economic losses estimated in the billions.
One controversial inclusion: the bill permits certain U.S. senators to sue the government if their phone records are accessed without notice — a clause that stirred intra-party tension and may be repealed later.
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Political Fallout
President Trump used the signing ceremony to shift blame onto Democrats, declaring, “This is no way to run a country.” He urged voters not to forget the shutdown when they head to the polls.
Polling following the breakdown indicated a roughly even split of blame between Republicans and Democrats, complicating the narrative of clear political victory.
Democrats, while supporting the reopening, remain unsatisfied: the deal did not extend expiring health-insurance subsidies under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), a major demand for their support. They promise to keep fighting that battle.
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Why It Matters
For millions of federal employees and contractors, this means back pay is on the way, jobs are protected again, and services begin to resume.
The economy can now regain some lost momentum: key data release delays (jobs, inflation) may now move forward, though some reports may never be published due to the disruption.
Politically, how the next funding battle is fought will be shaped by this moment — especially around health care, budget transparency, and future shutdown prevention.
The contentious inclusion of surveillance-related language and the health-care subsidy omission suggest this deal is a stop-gap, not a full resolution. The next fight looms.
