
WASHINGTON — House Republicans voted Friday evening to pass a short-term funding bill for the Department of Homeland Security that has no viable path in the Senate and is likely to extend the shutdown stalemate on Capitol Hill. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. The vote of 213-203 came after Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La.
Main Idea: House Speaker Mike Johnson pushed a short-term Homeland Security funding bill through the House, but it has little chance of passing the Senate and is likely to keep the shutdown fight going.
Key Points:
The DHS funding fight can keep the shutdown going, delaying pay for TSA workers and causing longer airport lines for travelers.
No clear positive impact identified.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
One of the two DHS agencies at the center of the funding dispute.
Core government agency whose funding lapse and bills are the subject of the article.
One of the two DHS agencies at the center of the funding dispute.
Central House Republican leader who rejected the Senate bill and drove the House action described in the story.
Named House leader publicly backing the Senate-passed bill and criticizing House Republicans.
Central legislative body whose vote and internal rebellion are the focus of the story.
Named president whose order on TSA pay is a major part of the article’s shutdown coverage.
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Sign in to commentNamed Senate leader whose decision not to bring back the Senate affects the funding standoff.
Named Senate leader making a central counterargument about the funding bill.
Central legislative body whose bill passed and whose rules determine the stalemate.
Agency directly affected by the shutdown and Trump’s order to pay employees.
Named member of Congress quoted supporting the House conservatives’ position.