Government reopens
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Congress voted to reopen the government in a bill signed by Trump, ending the longest government shutdown in US history.
The federal shutdown enters its 36th day and the history books by breaking the 35-day record set in 2018-2019.
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The U.S. government is due to lumber back to life on Thursday after the longest shutdown in U.S. history snarled air traffic, cut food assistance to low-income Americans and forced more than 1 million workers to go unpaid for more than a month.
This is the second record-breaking shutdown under the Trump administration. The president now has 74 shutdown days under his belt — and counting.
About 1.25 million federal workers haven’t been paid since Oct. 1. Roughly 10,000 flights have been cancelled since last week and disruptions will continue, the officials say, even as air traffic controllers return to work. Government contract awards have slowed and many food aid recipients have seen their benefits interrupted.
The United States' embassy and consulate in Nigeria have resumed full operations following the reopening of the American government.
Canada's budget shortfall will more than double this year as Prime Minister Mark Carney pours billions of dollars to fight U.S. tariffs, boost defense spending and diversify trade, his maiden budget proposal showed on Tuesday.
The Federal Government is back up and running this morning after President Trump signed the funding bill, ending the record 43-day long shutdown.