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The House on Wednesday approved a sweeping spending package to reopen the government, ending the longest shutdown in U.S. history, which left federal workers unpaid, cut food aid, and caused flight cancellations. The vote was 222-209, largely along party lines, with two Republicans opposing and six Democrats crossing over.

President Donald Trump signed the bill at around 10:30 PM; 45 minutes after the planned 9:45 signing, which officially reopened the government.

The bill survived last-minute GOP objections to a Senate-added provision allowing senators to sue the government over seized phone records from the Jan. 6 Capitol attack. Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) promised a separate vote next week to repeal that language.

“I think you can evaluate for yourself which party is working for the people,” Johnson said.

President Trump has indicated he is ready to sign the measure, which provides full-year funding for key departments like Agriculture and Veterans Affairs while funding other agencies short-term through Jan. 30. The package also reinstates federal workers fired during the shutdown and blocks further layoffs before February.

The deal does not extend expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies, drawing criticism from liberal Democrats and leaving Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) under fire for failing to unite the party. “I respect Chuck Schumer… but it may be time for the Senate Democrats to get a new leader,” Rep. Glenn Ivey (D-Md.) said.

Democrats also criticized the Trump administration for using the shutdown to pressure the party, with Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) saying, “Imagine that the president… depriving kids of food. And in addition to that, depriving their parents of health care. Staggering.”

The health care fight isn’t over. With ACA subsidies set to expire, Democrats and some moderate Republicans may push for a fix before the next funding deadline on Jan. 30, leaving the door open for another potential shutdown.