U.S. Capitol during partial government shutdown, with barricades, debating lawmakers, and news crews amid funding dispute.
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Partial government shutdown begins despite Senate funding deal

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The U.S. Senate approved a spending package on Friday to fund most federal agencies through September, but the House's recess delayed approval, triggering a partial government shutdown. The measure isolates Department of Homeland Security funding for two weeks amid demands for immigration enforcement reforms following deadly shootings in Minneapolis. Lawmakers expect the brief lapse to have minimal impact if the House acts swiftly on Monday.

A partial government shutdown took effect at midnight on Friday after the Senate passed a funding deal, but the House, on recess until Monday, has yet to approve it. The legislation covers five key areas—defense, labor-health-education, transportation-housing, state, and financial services—extending their funding through the fiscal year ending in September. However, funding for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which includes Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), is limited to a two-week stopgap to allow negotiations on reforms.

The impasse stems from two fatal shootings of U.S. citizens by federal immigration officers in Minneapolis this month, including Alex Pretti last week. Democrats, emboldened by public outrage, refused to support the broader DHS funding without changes to curb aggressive tactics. Their demands include requiring judicial warrants for raids, mandating body cameras and unmasked agents, establishing use-of-force rules and a code of conduct, ending "roving patrols," clearer identification, easier legal action against officers, and independent investigations.

"I think people want us to fight. People want us to act in an urgent way," said Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., arguing the party aligns with public sentiment. Republicans show mixed reactions: Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., criticized ICE leadership as "amateurs" undermining the president's immigration message, while others like Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., defended the agency. "We're not going to keep ICE from doing their job," Mullin said. Some Republicans support hearings and probes, and the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division is investigating Pretti's death.

President Trump has endorsed the package, but House passage is uncertain with Speaker Mike Johnson's slim majority and opposition from the Freedom Caucus. New ICE acting director Tom Homan promised "safer, more efficient" operations "by the book," though the White House's push for mass deportations, led by Stephen Miller, suggests limited shifts. Unlike the prolonged shutdown last fall, this one may last days, sparing most paychecks but furloughing some workers like TSA agents. Food assistance remains funded through September.

लोग क्या कह रहे हैं

X discussions reflect partisan divides on the partial U.S. government shutdown: conservatives criticize Democrats for delaying DHS funding to obstruct immigration enforcement amid backlash from Minneapolis shootings, portraying it as political leverage against Trump policies; journalists and neutral users note the shutdown's brevity until House vote on Monday and highlight Democratic demands for ICE reforms like body cameras and use-of-force standards; skeptics view it as typical Washington drama with more cliffs ahead.

संबंधित लेख

Dramatic illustration depicting congressional deadlock over DHS funding, protests against ICE, and Minneapolis shooting aftermath amid government shutdown threat.
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Congress heads toward partial shutdown over DHS funding fight

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A dispute in Congress over Department of Homeland Security funding, intensified by two fatal shootings by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis, has raised the likelihood of a partial government shutdown by the end of the week. Senate Democrats are refusing to support the funding without reforms to Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection. Republicans accuse Democrats of attempting to defund ICE amid ongoing protests in the city.

Senate Democrats and Republicans have reached a tentative deal to separate Department of Homeland Security funding from other appropriations bills, allowing approval of five bipartisan measures while negotiating a two-week stopgap for DHS. The agreement follows the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis by federal agents and comes as Democrats demand reforms to Immigration and Customs Enforcement practices. A short-term partial government shutdown remains likely before funding expires Friday midnight.

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A partial U.S. government shutdown began after Congress missed a funding deadline, centering on reforms to the Department of Homeland Security following the fatal shootings of two Minnesotans by ICE agents. Lawmakers are divided over measures like body cameras and judicial warrants for ICE operations, with a temporary funding deal offering only two weeks for DHS. The incident has sparked celebrity backlash and protests, including arrests related to a church disruption in St. Paul.

The U.S. House of Representatives is slated to vote Wednesday on a Senate-passed package to reopen the government on day 43 of the shutdown, the longest in U.S. history. The measure would fund most agencies through January 30 and provide full‑year appropriations for agriculture, veterans and Congress, while guaranteeing back pay and continuing SNAP through September 2026. It omits an extension of expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies, a key Democratic demand, though Senate leaders pledged a December vote on the issue.

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The Trump administration announced substantial layoffs of federal employees on October 10, 2025, as the government shutdown entered its tenth day. Court filings indicate around 4,200 workers across seven agencies are receiving reduction-in-force notices. The move has heightened tensions in Congress, with both parties blaming each other for the impasse over funding and health care subsidies.

The federal government shutdown that began Oct. 1 has entered its 35th day, delaying food assistance for roughly 42 million people as court orders push the administration to issue partial November SNAP benefits from limited USDA reserves. Political stalemate over Affordable Care Act subsidies persists while tech nonprofits and local charities try to fill the gap.

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President Donald Trump has instructed Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem not to send federal agents to protests in Democratic-led cities unless local authorities request help. This comes amid backlash over aggressive immigration enforcement in Minneapolis, including the fatal shooting of nurse Alex Pretti. The move coincides with negotiations over short-term DHS funding as Democrats push for restrictions on agent operations.

 

 

 

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