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The U.S. Senate’s latest vote to pass a stopgap funding bill to end the partial federal government shutdown failed on Oct. 9. That means shutdown, which started Oct. 1, will continue.

The Senate did not pass dueling bills authored by Republicans and Democrats. The Republican-backed measure, which would restore government funding until Nov. 21, was defeated by a vote of 54-45. It needed 60 votes to pass.

The Democrat proposal, which would add health care funding, lost by a vote of 50-47.

In all seven votes, a majority of 55 senators have voted in favor of the Republican bill, mostly along partisan lines with a few important defections. That vote-breaking is unlikely to change; no additional Democrats have said they would support the measure, USA TODAY reports.

The Senate votes came as President Donald Trump warned he could block furloughed federal workers from receiving back pay once this shutdown is over. That’s a major departure from previous shutdowns.

The layoffs of federal workers have begun, the White House says..

How the Senate voted to extend funding, end shutdown

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The shutdown began on Oct. 1, the start of fiscal year 2026, after Senate Republicans failed to win enough Democratic support on a short-term funding measure that would keep federal agencies open through Nov. 21.

Democrats want a permanent extension of enhanced premium tax credits to help Americans purchase private health insurance through the Affordable Care Act. They also want written assurances that the White House will not try to unilaterally cancel spending agreed to in any deal.

How did your senator vote?

Republicans want the government funded at current levels and say policy issues, including health care, should be considered separately.

How does 2025 shutdown compare to others?

About 750,000 federal employees ranging from workers at national parks to financial regulators could be furloughed under a shutdown, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. About $400 million in daily compensation could be withheld, USA TODAY reported.

CONTRIBUTING Terry Mosely, Joey Garrison, Sudiksha Kochi, Joey Garrison, Zac Anderson, Sarah D. Wire and Darren Samuelsohn

SOURCE USA TODAY Network reporting and research; senate.gov; Reuters; govfacts.org