The Congress has until midnight Friday to come up with a way to fund…

The U.S. Con­gress has un­til mid­night Fri­day to come up with a way to fund the gov­ern­ment or fed­er­al agen­cies will shut down, mean­ing hun­dreds of thou­sands of fed­er­al em­ploy­ees could be sent home — or stay on the job with­out pay — just ahead of the hol­i­days.

Re­pub­li­cans aban­doned a bi­par­ti­san plan Wednes­day to pre­vent a shut­down af­ter Pres­i­dent-elect Don­ald Trump and bil­lion­aire Elon Musk came out against it. Trump told House Speak­er Mike John­son to es­sen­tial­ly rene­go­ti­ate the deal days be­fore a dead­line when fed­er­al fund­ing runs out.

On Thurs­day, Re­pub­li­cans did just that, putting to­geth­er a re­vamped gov­ern­ment fund­ing pro­pos­al that would keep the gov­ern­ment run­ning for three more months and sus­pend the debt ceil­ing for two years, un­til Jan. 30, 2027. But the bill failed over­whelm­ing­ly in a House vote hours lat­er, leav­ing next steps un­cer­tain.

Ear­ly Fri­day, some of John­son’s biggest crit­ics brought their griev­ances to a pri­vate meet­ing in his Capi­tol of­fice to seek a way for­ward, but some ex­pressed doubts a new vote would hap­pen be­fore the dead­line.

Here’s what to know about a pos­si­ble gov­ern­ment shut­down, what agen­cies would be af­fect­ed and how long it could last:

What does it mean if the gov­ern­ment shuts down?

A gov­ern­ment shut­down hap­pens when Con­gress doesn’t pass leg­is­la­tion ei­ther tem­porar­i­ly or more per­ma­nent­ly fund­ing the gov­ern­ment, and such a mea­sure isn’t signed by the pres­i­dent.

When would a gov­ern­ment shut­down start?

If Con­gress doesn’t ap­prove a con­tin­u­ing res­o­lu­tion or more per­ma­nent spend­ing mea­sure by Fri­day, the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment will shut down.

When the fis­cal year end­ed Sept. 30, Con­gress passed a tem­po­rary fund­ing bill to keep the gov­ern­ment in op­er­a­tion.

That mea­sure ex­pires on Fri­day.

Which gov­ern­ment agen­cies would be af­fect­ed by a shut­down?

Each fed­er­al agency de­ter­mines its own plan for how to han­dle a shut­down, but ba­si­cal­ly any gov­ern­ment op­er­a­tions deemed non-es­sen­tial stop hap­pen­ing, and hun­dreds of thou­sands of fed­er­al em­ploy­ees see their work dis­rupt­ed.

Some­times work­ers are fur­loughed, mean­ing that they keep their jobs but tem­porar­i­ly don’t work un­til the gov­ern­ment re­opens. Oth­er fed­er­al work­ers may stay on the job but with­out pay, with the ex­pec­ta­tion that they would be paid back in full once the gov­ern­ment re­opens.

The ba­sic rules for who works and who doesn’t date back to the ear­ly 1980s and haven’t been sig­nif­i­cant­ly mod­i­fied since. Un­der a prece­dent-set­ting mem­o­ran­dum penned by then-Pres­i­dent Ronald Rea­gan bud­get chief David Stock­man, fed­er­al work­ers are ex­empt­ed from fur­loughs if their jobs are na­tion­al se­cu­ri­ty-re­lat­ed or if they per­form es­sen­tial ac­tiv­i­ties that “pro­tect life and prop­er­ty.”

Es­sen­tial gov­ern­ment agen­cies like the FBI, the Bor­der Pa­trol and the Coast Guard re­main open. Trans­porta­tion Se­cu­ri­ty Ad­min­is­tra­tion of­fi­cers would con­tin­ue to staff air­port check­points. The U.S. Postal Ser­vice al­so won’t be af­fect­ed be­cause it’s an in­de­pen­dent agency.

But na­tion­al parks and mon­u­ments would close, and while troops would stay at their posts, many civil­ian em­ploy­ees in agen­cies like the De­part­ment of De­fense would be sent home. Court sys­tems would be af­fect­ed, too, with civ­il pro­ceed­ings paused, while crim­i­nal pros­e­cu­tions con­tin­ue.

Au­to­mat­ed tax col­lec­tion would stay on track, but the In­ter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice would stop au­dit­ing tax re­turns.

Will a gov­ern­ment shut­down af­fect So­cial Se­cu­ri­ty checks?

No. Re­cip­i­ents of both So­cial Se­cu­ri­ty and Medicare would con­tin­ue to re­ceive their ben­e­fits, which are part of manda­to­ry spend­ing that’s not sub­ject to an­nu­al ap­pro­pri­a­tions mea­sures. Doc­tors and hos­pi­tals would al­so con­tin­ue to get their Medicare and Med­ic­aid re­im­burse­ments.

But it’s pos­si­ble that new ap­pli­ca­tions wouldn’t be processed. Dur­ing a gov­ern­ment shut­down in 1996, thou­sands of Medicare ap­pli­cants were turned away dai­ly.

What is a “CR,” or con­tin­u­ing res­o­lu­tion?

When Con­gress is down to the wire on pass­ing mea­sures to fund the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment, the term “CR” of­ten comes up. What does it mean?

“CR” stands for “con­tin­u­ing res­o­lu­tion,” and it’s a tem­po­rary spend­ing bill that lets the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment stay open and op­er­at­ing be­fore Con­gress and the pres­i­dent have ap­proved a more per­ma­nent ap­pro­pri­a­tion.

A “clean CR” is es­sen­tial­ly a bill that ex­tends ex­ist­ing ap­pro­pri­a­tions, at the same lev­els as the pri­or fis­cal year.

What is an om­nibus bill?

It’s a mas­sive, all-en­com­pass­ing mea­sure that law­mak­ers gen­er­al­ly had lit­tle time to di­gest — or un­der­stand — be­fore vot­ing on it.

There are a lot of spend­ing mea­sures all rolled in­to one, and some­times that’s what hap­pens if the dozen sep­a­rate fund­ing mea­sures haven’t worked their way through the con­gres­sion­al spend­ing process in time to be passed in or­der to fund the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment.

But Re­pub­li­cans opt­ed against an om­nibus this time, hop­ing in­stead to rene­go­ti­ate all fed­er­al spend­ing next year when Trump is in the White House and they will con­trol both cham­bers of Con­gress.

Is a gov­ern­ment shut­down go­ing to hap­pen?

Maybe — and maybe not.

There is of­ten a scram­ble on Capi­tol Hill to put to­geth­er a last-minute fund­ing pack­age to keep the gov­ern­ment open just be­fore a dead­line, at least tem­porar­i­ly. But shut­downs have hap­pened, most re­cent­ly six years ago, when Trump de­mand­ed fund­ing for a wall along the U.S.-Mex­i­co bor­der. That shut­down was the longest in U.S. his­to­ry.

Jim­my Carter saw a shut­down every year dur­ing his term as pres­i­dent. And there were six shut­downs dur­ing Rea­gan’s time in the White House. —(AP)

_________

Sto­ry by MEG KIN­NARD | As­so­ci­at­ed Press

Meg Kin­nard re­port­ed from Charleston, South Car­oli­na.

Maribel Byron
Read More

Latest

NFL Analyst Raises Red Flags Over Arvell Reese’s Fit As Edge Rusher on PFSN’s Football Debate Club

As the 2026 NFL Draft approaches, few defensive prospects have generated as much intrigue as Ohio State’s Arvell Reese. Widely viewed as one of the most talented defenders in the class, Reese’s versatility has made him a standout on scouting boards. However, with that versatility comes an ongoing debate about how he projects at the

Athena launches FabOrchestrator, an agentic AI platform for manufacturing execution systems

In short: Athena Technology Solutions, a Fremont-based MES integrator with roughly 120 employees, has launched FabOrchestrator, an agentic AI platform for manufacturing that automates reporting, support tickets, system modelling, and code generation for semiconductor and electronics factories. Built in partnership with Bangalore-based LLM at Scale.AI, it layers LLM capabilities on top of the Siemens Opcenter

Concord’s in the Rap Game: Latest Tie-Up Sees Company Managing Pop Smoke, Ski Mask the Slump God Catalogs

Photo Credit: Concord + Victor Victor Worldwide Concord announces a multi-year partnership with Victor Victor Worldwide to expand Concord’s presence in hip-hop. Independent music company Concord has announced a strategic multi-year venture with Victor Victor Worldwide (VVW), a New York-based record label founded by global entertainment executive Steven Victor. The partnership will help drive VVW’s

Want Your Music Featured on Netflix? Having a Major Label Helps

Music More Netflix blow-ups, please (Photo Credit: Yousafbhutta)Music Bagging...

Newsletter

Don't miss

NFL Analyst Raises Red Flags Over Arvell Reese’s Fit As Edge Rusher on PFSN’s Football Debate Club

As the 2026 NFL Draft approaches, few defensive prospects have generated as much intrigue as Ohio State’s Arvell Reese. Widely viewed as one of the most talented defenders in the class, Reese’s versatility has made him a standout on scouting boards. However, with that versatility comes an ongoing debate about how he projects at the

Athena launches FabOrchestrator, an agentic AI platform for manufacturing execution systems

In short: Athena Technology Solutions, a Fremont-based MES integrator with roughly 120 employees, has launched FabOrchestrator, an agentic AI platform for manufacturing that automates reporting, support tickets, system modelling, and code generation for semiconductor and electronics factories. Built in partnership with Bangalore-based LLM at Scale.AI, it layers LLM capabilities on top of the Siemens Opcenter

Concord’s in the Rap Game: Latest Tie-Up Sees Company Managing Pop Smoke, Ski Mask the Slump God Catalogs

Photo Credit: Concord + Victor Victor Worldwide Concord announces a multi-year partnership with Victor Victor Worldwide to expand Concord’s presence in hip-hop. Independent music company Concord has announced a strategic multi-year venture with Victor Victor Worldwide (VVW), a New York-based record label founded by global entertainment executive Steven Victor. The partnership will help drive VVW’s

Want Your Music Featured on Netflix? Having a Major Label Helps

Music More Netflix blow-ups, please (Photo Credit: Yousafbhutta)Music Bagging...

SoE necessary but not sufficient, business leaders say

PE­TER CHRISTO­PHER Se­nior Mul­ti­me­dia Re­porter pe­ter.christo­pher@guardian.co.tt Heavy hand­ed but nec­es­sary giv­en the state of crime in T&T. This was a com­mon as­sess­ment from var­i­ous busi­ness groups when asked for their per­spec­tive on the lat­est de­c­la­ra­tion of a state of emer­gency in the coun­try. The T&T Cham­ber of In­dus­try and Com­merce, in a re­leased is­sued yes­ter­day

The Big Business of Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy

Can a nine-episode limited series really impact an entire season of shopping trends? Today brands are experiencing—and chasing—the “Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy effect” as a result of Ryan Murphy’s Love Story. And in many cases, it’s more pervasive than they could have prepared for. The FX series, based on the relationship between John F. Kennedy Jr. and

‘Mind Your Own Business’: Kamal Haasan Rebukes Trump Over ‘Permission’ To Buy Russian Oil

Updated 8 March 2026 at 18:20 IST Actor and Rajya Sabha MP Kamal Haasan has hit out at US President Donald Trump after America announced that it has given India temporary "permission" to buy Russian oil amid global supply disruptions caused by the Middle East conflict. 'Mind Your Own Business': Kamal Haasan Rebukes Trump Over