Congress took a major step toward ending the record-breaking Department of Homeland Security shutdown on Thursday as the White House warned hundreds of thousands of federal employees were on the verge of missing paychecks amid the 75-day funding lapse.
The House of Representatives unanimously approved a Senate-passed spending measure covering most of the department’s appropriations through September.
The vote came after the DHS funding measure had stalled in the lower chamber for more than a month as House Speaker Mike Johnson declined to put the bill on the floor over objections to language he said defunded law enforcement. The speaker's opposition reflected the views of many in his conference, who viewed the bill as a dead letter when the Senate passed it unanimously in March.Johnson changed course this week after the White House appeared to side with the Senate and urged swift passage of the upper chamber’s bill.
"We’re not defying the White House," Johnson told reporters Wednesday. "Everybody understands what we're doing. We're all one team."... Read More: FOX News