US Government's closing enters the 9th day: Senate again does not succeed in short -term financing bills amid healthcare

The US government remains in a standstill with no resolution after the Senate failed on Wednesday (October 8) to accept a Republican or Democratic supported short -term financing bill. The vote was the sixth unsuccessful attempt to expand federal financing as the closure entered its eighth day. Senate lawmakers rejected a continued resolution of the home that the government would have funded until November 21. The vote was 54-45, and did not have the 60 votes needed to promote the legislation. Three democratic senators broke ranks to vote ‘yes’ about the Republican written measure, while only one Republican, sen. Rand Paul van Kentucky, opposed to it. The Senate also rejected the Democrats’ version of the Funding Bill, which included the terms of healthcare. With both proposals failing, Congress remains closed, leaving federal programs and workers in limbo. Trump indicates changes to federal worker refund, Donald Trump, warned this week that the lined federal workers may not receive repayment as soon as the downtime ends, and deviates sharply from the precedent. He also threatened discharge and cuts to government programs if the downtime continued. “It depends on who we’re talking about,” Trump said in the Oval Office on Tuesday when asked if filled employees. ‘For the most part, we’re going to take care of our people. There are some people who really do not deserve to be cared for, and we will take care of them in a different way. ‘ Huis -Republicans ask for the Republicans of the house, and expressed frustration over the ongoing impasse, which urged the Senate and the Democrats to act. “This madness can end. This madness must end with the common sense that eventually arises,” said House leader Steve Scalise. “Chuck Schumer, if you can’t do the right thing because you’re so scared of your political work, think about the work of millions of families out there who don’t want the suffering on them.” At the press conference, some lawmakers claimed that Democrats tried to give healthcare to undocumented immigrants. Federal law limits such care, which only enables the coverage of emergency for individuals who are not documented. Unsolved dispute for healthcare holds discussions on the closing stall maize centers on the future of subsidies for affordable care laws that will expire at the end of the year. Republicans believe that the issue can be addressed later, while Democrats try to resolve it immediately to prevent the insurance rates.