34 months ago
Naomi Pyle doesn’t know if her husband’s next paycheck from the U.S. Navy will arrive on Wednesday.
The couple, who are raising two children in San Diego, California, were already struggling to make ends meet before the government shutdown on Oct. 1, Pyle, 30, told CBS News, adding that the family wouldn’t be able to cover all of their expenses if he wasn’t paid on time.
President Trump last week sought to assuage those concerns, writing on social media that his administration had “identified funds” to pay the military and ordering Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to ensure paychecks went out on Oct. 15 as scheduled. Although the president did not provide additional details, the White House Office of Management and Budget told The Associated Press that it would use Pentagon research and development funds to pay troops “in the event the funding gap continues after October 15.”
Yet for some military families, even the possibility of missing a single paycheck fuels worries about money.
“We were already living paycheck to paycheck, so that doesn’t help at all,” Pyle told CBS News. “We have to choose which bills to pay now.”
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10:56 a.m.
Bill Clark
House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican from Louisiana, said he had no plans to change his shutdown strategy, saying at his daily news conference that “I have nothing to negotiate.”
“We’re not playing a game. They’re playing a game,” he said.
The House has been out of session since September 19, when it passed the Republican Party’s measure to fund the government until November 21. Johnson repeatedly extended the pause, arguing that the House had done its job and that it was up to Senate Democrats to provide the handful of votes needed to end the shutdown. But Senate Democrats remain committed to their demand that Republicans negotiate on enhanced subsidies from the expiring Affordable Care Act.
House Republican leaders continued to hammer Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, ahead of the upper chamber’s eighth vote on the House-passed measure.
Johnson said Schumer’s refusal to support upholding the resolution “is clearly and simply an exercise in image rehabilitation” with the left-wing base, arguing that Schumer is trying to fend off a primary challenge from the left.
“He represents the broken status quo,” Johnson said.
House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, a Republican from Louisiana, added: “Our country deserves far better than what we are getting from failed leadership. And President Johnson said maybe it’s because Chuck Schumer has been around too long and wants to cling to the old way of doing things. »
9:20 a.m.
The Senate will reconvene at 3 p.m. and take a procedural vote on the House-passed GOP funding bill at 5:30 p.m., according to a notice from Majority Whip John Barrasso’s office.
In previous rounds of voting, the chamber also voted on whether to advance the Democratic version of a funding bill. But Barrasso’s notice made no mention of considering the Democratic bill this time around.
Updated at 08:48
The House has not been in session since September 19, after passing a measure to fund the government until November 21. And the House is still in recess this week after GOP leaders canceled votes. Republicans say the Lower House has already done its job and continues to pressure the Senate to pass the bill.
Meanwhile, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries called House Democrats back to Washington this week, writing in a letter to his colleagues Saturday that they would return to Washington and meet Tuesday evening to “discuss the path forward.”
Jeffries and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, both Democrats from New York, say the solution to the shutdown comes through negotiations between congressional leaders and the White House. Republicans claim there is nothing to negotiate, since the House has already passed a measure to keep the government funded.
Jeffries reiterated his position on MSNBC Monday, saying Republican leaders “need to sit down and negotiate” to reopen the government, saying they have been “basically silent on the radio” since the White House meeting before the shutdown.
“The Republicans are nowhere to be found,” Jeffries said. “They literally are not in Washington and haven’t been in Washington for several weeks and have no plans to be there this week.”
Updated at 08:48
The Senate returns to Washington on Tuesday afternoon and is expected to hold a procedural vote in the evening on a House-passed measure to fund the government, once again attempting to break the deadlock after the bill repeatedly failed to secure the necessary 60 votes last week.
Republicans tried to get rid of enough Democrats to pass a House-passed measure to keep the government funded until November 21. But they were unable to gain new support from Democrats just before the shutdown began. In the Senate, 60 votes are needed to advance most measures, and with only 53 Republicans in the Senate, Democratic support is essential.
Only one Democrat initially crossed the aisle to support the bill in a vote last month. But in the next vote, on September 30, two others joined the Republicans. One Republican, Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, has consistently voted against the measure to fund the government. Five more Democrats are needed to advance the measure.
But Tuesday’s vote marks a change in approach: It’s the first time the House will vote on House-passed legislation without also voting on a competing Democratic measure. The Democrats’ bill would fund the government through Oct. 31 and include an extension of expired health insurance tax credits.
Updated at 08:48
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Coast Guard personnel will receive paychecks this week from funds from the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” passed earlier this year.
Over the weekend, President Trump ordered the Pentagon to pay military personnel despite the government shutdown, but the Coast Guard falls under the Department of Homeland Security.
“President Trump did not want any of our service members to go without pay because of Democratic political theater, and we at DHS have developed an innovative solution to ensure that does not happen,” Noem wrote Monday on that they continue to carry out their crucial military and internal security missions.”
Noem did not disclose the source of funding for the paychecks.
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