Plan supported by Trump to avoid the government closure

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The Chamber adopted a short -term federal funding bill supported by President Donald Trump on Friday morning, opening the way to avoiding the government if the Senate follows suit.
The legislation aims to maintain the government financed at current levels until November 21 with a measure known as continuous resolution (CR), designed to give more time to the creditors of the Chamber and the Senate to conclude an agreement on federal expenses for the 2026.
Tax 2025 should end on September 30, and the congress risks a partial closure if the CR does not go to the Trump office for a signature by then.
The brand of the Republicans of the Senate is a crisis of “closure of Schumer” while the Democrats are committed

The president of the Mike Johnson room, a republican of Louisiana, on the left, and President Donald Trump serve his hand during a round table Invest America in the dining room in the White House in Washington on June 9, 2025. (Yuri Gripas / Abaca / Bloomberg via Getty Images)
In addition to keeping the government open until before Thanksgiving, legislation also includes $ 30 million to increase the security of the legislators thanks to a mutual aid for the police forces of the Capitol and the local police.
This decision has been made as concern about political violence has skyrocketed in recent months, especially after the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk in UTAH last week.
The CR also honors a demand from the White House for an additional $ 58 million in combined security funding for legal and executive branches, as well as $ 1 billion allocated to Washington, the DC budget after the Congress repealed this amount earlier this year.
A closure could be politically expensive for Republicans and Democrats.
Democratic leaders had threatened for days to oppose the bill, furious not to be excluded from CR negotiations and demand increased funding for health care subsidies.
The chief of the minority of the Hakeem Jeffries room, DN.Y., criticized the CR as recently as Friday morning, less than an hour before the vote.
Trump puts pressure on Republicans to adopt a continuous resolution to avoid a government closure

The chief of the minority of the Hakeem Jeffries room, DN.Y., on the right, is joined by the head of the Senate minority, Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., for a press conference in the statuary room of the Capitol on February 12, 2025. (Rod Lamkey, Jr./ap)
“Today, there is a choice in front of each member of the House of Representatives: are we going to defend the health care of the American people, or are we going to bend the knee to Donald Trump and his continuous efforts to ban health care for everyday Americans?” Said Jeffries.
“We are not voting on a republican shareholder bill of spending, and we will continue to defend the health care of the American people.”
President Mike Johnson, R-La., Had a small precious sleeve in the vote, losing only two Republicans if all the Democrats turned against.
But in the Senate, where at least several democratic votes will be necessary to reach the threshold of 60 votes to advance the legislation, the chief of the minority Chuck Schumer, Dn.y., undergoes significant pressure from his left flank to overthrow the bill led by the GOP.
Schumer made the progressives angry in March when he expressed a key vote to help avoid a government closure with another bill led by the Republicans.
The Republicans, on the other hand, have prepared to put the blame on a potential closure on the shoulders of the Democrats.
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Trump posted on Truth Social Thursday evening: “The Republicans of the Chamber are making a very important vote to adopt a clean temporary financing bill. The chief of the Democrats, Cryin ‘Chuck Schumer, wants to close the government.”
“Republicans want the government to stay open. Each House Republican should unify and vote yes!” Trump wrote.
Democrats have published their own CR plan
The Senate should consider both versions and could vote on Friday.