The Japan Times - House vote likely Wednesday on ending US government shutdown

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House vote likely Wednesday on ending US government shutdown
House vote likely Wednesday on ending US government shutdown / Photo: Brendan SMIALOWSKI - AFP

House vote likely Wednesday on ending US government shutdown

The effort to end the longest-ever US government shutdown heads Wednesday toward a final vote, as President Donald Trump declared victory in the political face-off and rival Democrats tore themselves apart over the deal.

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The House of Representatives appeared likely to vote Wednesday on a spending bill to solve the six-week standoff, after eight Democrats broke ranks in the Senate on Monday to side with Trump's Republicans.

During a Veterans Day speech at Arlington National Cemetery, Trump broke off to praise Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune.

"Congratulations to you and to John and to everybody on a very big victory," Trump said as he spotted Johnson in the audience.

"We're opening up our country -- it should have never been closed," added Trump, bucking US presidential tradition by using a ceremonial event to score political points.

Trump said later he expected the Republican-controlled House to approve the bill to fund the government through January. "Only people that hate our country want to see it not open," he told ESPN.

- 'Serious calculations' -

Top Democrats have vowed to oppose the government-funding bill, in large part because it does not directly address the extension of health insurance subsidies, which are set to expire at the end of this year.

But it is likely to pass the House as it only needs a simple majority, which Republicans narrowly have.

From the start, Trump had piled pressure on Democrats by letting the shutdown be as punishing as possible and refusing to negotiate on their demands on health insurance.

A million federal workers went unpaid, food benefits for low-income Americans came under threat and air travelers faced thousands of cancelations and delays ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy warned Tuesday that the chaos could get worse by the weekend if the shutdown persists, with air traffic controllers unable to be paid and authorities ordering further slowdowns in flight traffic.

"You're going to have airlines that make serious calculations about whether they continue to fly, full stop," Duffy told reporters at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport.

Polls have shown that voters increasingly blamed Trump's party as the shutdown dragged on past its 40th day.

But it was the Democrats who caved and gave Republicans the extra votes they needed Monday under Senate rules, without securing the key concessions they wanted.

"Health care of people all across this country is on the brink of becoming unaffordable," top House Democrat Hakeem Jeffries told reporters Tuesday as he vowed to maintain the fight for lower costs.

- Democratic rift -

The deal has split Democrats, with many senior figures saying they should have held out for the extension of health insurance subsidies at the heart of the shutdown battle.

"Pathetic," California Governor Gavin Newsom, widely seen as a 2028 Democratic presidential frontrunner, posted on X.

Despite opposing the bill vocally and voting against it, Democratic Senate Minority leader Chuck Schumer has faced calls from some lawmakers in his party to step down for failing to corral his senators.

For Democrats, the wavering was especially galling as it came just days after election wins that put Trump on the back foot for the first time since his White House return.

Democratic wins in New York City, New Jersey and Virginia in particular highlighted the issue of affordability, a weak spot for billionaire Trump and the Republicans ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

But Senate Republicans have promised Democrats a vote on health insurance, with millions of Americans set to see their "Obamacare" costs double without an extension of the subsidies.

The health care issue has itself threatened to cause a rift in Trump's "Make America Great Again" coalition.

On Monday, Trump said one-time ally Marjorie Taylor Greene had "lost her way" after the congresswoman made critical comments, including that she was "disgusted" that premiums could double for her own grown-up children.

T.Sato--JT