Jeffrey Epstein, United States Senate and House
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It was a busy weekend for Senators who convened off-hours to end the shutdown. What happened, and what's next? Another vote? Is the shutdown over?
The Senate voted Sunday night to reopen the U.S. government after a crippling 40-day shutdown, the longest in American history. The bipartisan continuing resolution bill, which included at least eight Democratic Senators' support in a late-night vote on Capitol Hill,
The Senate will return today, Monday, Oct. 27, 2025, amid the second-longest government shutdown in history, although a Senate vote today to reopen the government is not likely as the outlook looks bleak with President Donald Trump in Asia and the House ...
Although most Senate Democrats may have opposed this bill, they were resigned to the fact that this part of the fight is over, sources said. They will take the battle over health care to the midterms and argue that Republicans refused to do anything for the millions of Americans who will see their health insurance premiums skyrocket.
The United States Senate has taken its first step towards ending the longest government shutdown in the country’s history as lawmakers agreed to move forward with a stopgap funding package. The Republican-led proposal,
U.S. Senate candidate Colin Allred is criticizing Democrats for siding with Republicans on a vote to end the shutdown, urging stronger party resolve.
Attorney and cryptocurrency advocate John Deaton has won the endorsement of the Massachusetts Republican Party in his bid for U.S. Senate.
Fairbanks KTVF on MSN
Trump choice for Alaska federal judge gets low-key hearing in US Senate
Aaron Christian Peterson didn’t face any tough questions during a public hearing of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary.