In a significant development, the federal government has officially reopened after the longest shutdown in U.S. history.
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Here are the key details:
The shutdown lasted 43 days and affected hundreds of thousands of federal workers—either furloughed or working without pay—as well as millions of Americans relying on government services.
A spending bill was passed in the Senate by a 60-40 vote and subsequently approved by the House, paving the way for the reopening.
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Under the legislation, most federal agencies will be funded through January 30, 2026, while three departments (Agriculture; Military Construction & Veterans Affairs; Legislative Branch) receive full-year appropriations.
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The measure ensures retroactive pay for federal employees and halts further layoffs through January.
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Notably, the debate over extending health care subsidies under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) remains unresolved — Democrats secured a future vote, but no guarantee of passage was provided.
What happens next?
Federal workers will begin returning to their duties under normal operating procedures.
Funding runs until late January, meaning if a long-term deal isn’t reached, another shutdown risk looms.
The healthcare subsidy issue remains a flashpoint and could spark future budget battles.
Some services may still face backlog or operational delays as agencies resume after the shutdown hiatus.
Why it matters
This shutdown had real-world impacts: travel disruptions, payment delays, suspended programs — the effects rippled across sectors. The resolution underscores the fragility of the budget process and highlights ongoing partisan divisions over federal spending and priorities.
We’ll monitor how agencies handle the transition back to full operations and what moves Congress makes next. Would you like a breakdown of how specific sectors (travel, food aid, federal hiring) were affected and what the reopening means for them?