President Trump Signs Bill to End Government Shutdown
President Donald Trump shows the signed bill package to re-open the federal government in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on November 12, 2025.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP
President Trump has signed a bill to fund the government, bringing a close to the longest government shutdown in history, one that saw millions of Americans affected and ended with little political gain.
The bill passed Wednesday night despite Republicansâ narrow margin in the House. Six Democrats joined their Republican colleagues to get the bill over the finish line 43 days after the shutdown began.
Two Republicans voted no. The final vote was 222 to 209.
President Trump signed the bill shortly after the House vote. Trump blamed Democrats for the shutdown at the signing event in the Oval Office.
âThis was an easy extension but they didnât want to do it the easy way,â Trump said. âThey wanted to do it the hard way.â
In addition to extending last yearâs spending levels through the end of January for most of the government, the bill provides funding for some agencies through the end of next September, including payments for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).
The bill includes a measure to reverse layoffs the Trump administration imposed during the shutdown, provides backpay for federal employees, and institutes protections against further layoffs.
But the central issue underlying the entire shutdown â extensions on enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies that expire at the end of the year â is not addressed in the bill.
Instead, as part of the deal reached with a bipartisan contingent of senators, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., agreed to hold a vote in mid-December on Democrat-drafted legislation aimed at extending those subsidies.
That doesnât sit well with many Senate Democrats, who remain wary of the pledge.
âA handshake deal with my Republican colleagues to reopen the government and no guarantee to actually lower costs is simply not good enough,â said Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wisc., who voted against the measure.
Even if a December bill addressing the expiring subsidies passes the Senate, it would need to go to the House. Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has not made a guarantee to bring such a bill to the floor for a vote.
A lot of pain, not a lot of gain
Government shutdowns historically have not been effective tools for advancing a partyâs policy goals. The last six weeks proved that to be the rule, not an exception.
The decision by Senate Democrats not to fund the government before Oct. 1 was fueled, at least in part, by demands from the Democratsâ political base to be a strong opposition party.
The group of seven Democrats and one independent senator who voted to end the shutdown acknowledged that waiting longer wouldnât bring about a different result.
The result is an end to a shutdown that does not address the core demand from Democrats on the subsidies.
Thuneâs ultimate deal with Democrats aligns with his repeated statements throughout the shutdown that Republicans would be open to negotiating on the expiring subsidies only after the government was funded, not before.
Another factor that didnât go Democratsâ way is the president himself. President Trump has been known at times to upend Congressional Republicansâ game plan.
What happens now?
Both parties have significant choices ahead that could lay the groundwork for their political successes and headaches through next year.
Senate Democrats have about a month to craft a bill that addresses the expiring ACA subsidies in a way that brings enough Republicans on board for passage.
If theyâre successful at getting an extension, Democrats will be able to start 2026 with a policy victory in hand that will shape their messaging going into the midterm elections.
Some Republicans have shown interest in addressing the subsidies, but want to institute reforms like fraud prevention and income caps.
And both parties have to contend with the fact that the government is only funded for a few months. Congress will still have to pass nine other appropriations bills before the continuing resolution ends.

