US Trends

when will house vote on shutdown

The U.S. House of Representatives voted on the government shutdown funding bill on November 12, 2025 , successfully ending the longest shutdown in American history after 43 days.

Vote Timeline

The Senate passed the funding package on November 10, 2025, in a 60-40 bipartisan vote, extending government funding through January 30, 2026 , while protecting key programs like SNAP, WIC, veterans' services, and military construction. House Speaker Mike Johnson scheduled the chamber's first session in 54 days for November 12, with votes starting as early as 4 p.m. ET, amid air travel disruptions from the shutdown. The House approved the bill 222-209, sending it to President Donald Trump, who signed it that day, ensuring backpay for furloughed workers and reversing some administration firings.

Key Details

  • Bipartisan Support : A few Democrats crossed party lines, though leadership opposed it due to unresolved Affordable Care Act issues; Republicans like Johnson blamed Democrats for the impasse.
  • Trump's Role : President Trump endorsed the deal publicly, calling it "very good," despite initial shutdown tensions over health care subsidies.
  • Aftermath : No new shutdown vote is scheduled as of January 10, 2026; funding holds until the January 30 deadline, with potential future debates on ACA extensions.

Political Context

This shutdown shattered the prior 35-day record from 2018-2019, driven by disputes over Obamacare provisions and fiscal year 2026 priorities. House Republicans held a slim majority, relying on near-unity and select Democratic votes to pass the measure. Ongoing partisan finger-pointing persists, with Johnson predicting voter backlash against Democrats.

TL;DR : House voted and ended the shutdown on Nov 12, 2025; funding lasts to Jan 30, 2026—no current vote planned.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.