Senate spurns bill to reopen government for ninth time as impasse deepens
- The Senate rejected a bill to reopen the federal government for the ninth time, with a vote of 51-44 and five senators not voting.
- Senate Majority Leader John Thune stated that Democrats are to blame for the ongoing government shutdown.
- Thune remarked that uncertain Americans will have to wait until Democrats are satisfied with their far-left base's demands.
- The latest vote ended with a 51-44 split, and five senators did not vote.
41 Articles
41 Articles
Senate spurns bill to reopen government for ninth time as impasse deepens
Senators on Wednesday spurned the House-passed “clean” stopgap spending bill for a ninth time, putting the government shutdown a step closer to lasting into next week as the impasse deepens.
The government’s closure is prolonged after failure in the ninth Senate vote
Senate spurns bill to reopen government for ninth time as impasse deepens
Senators on Wednesday spurned the House-passed “clean” stopgap spending bill for a ninth time, putting the government shutdown a step closer to lasting into next week as the impasse deepens. The Senate voted 51-44 on the proposal, which would fund the government through late November. Sixty votes were needed for it to advance. The tally didn't change from previous votes. Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.), John Fetterman (D-Pa.) and Angus Ki…
Senate rejects House-backed continuing resolution for ninth time as shutdown stretches into 15th day
The latest vote marked the ninth time that the Senate failed to advance or pass the legislation, prolonging the government shutdown past the two-week mark. The vote failed in a 51-44 split, with five senators not voting.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 58% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium