
What to know about the government shutdown:
The federal government began to shut down at 12 a.m. on Wednesday as lawmakers failed to resolve a dispute over spending, leading to the first lapse in funding in nearly seven years.
A House-passed GOP bill to extend current spending levels for seven weeks failed again in the Senate, where Republicans need Democratic support to approve spending. Democrats are demanding the extension of health care tax credits in exchange for their support.
Without a deal, funding lapsed at nearly every agency and department as the clock struck midnight.
Agencies will begin implementing shutdown procedures on Wednesday morning to keep or send hundreds of thousands of workers home on furlough. Essential employees and those whose duties are funded through other means will stay on the job. Almost no federal workers, whether they are furloughed or not, will be paid until Congress reaches a deal. They will all receive back pay once the shutdown is over.
The last government shutdown began at the end of 2018 and was the longest in history, lasting for 34 days. The effects of this lapse could be widespread, depending on how long it lasts. The Congressional Budget Office predicted that the cost of paying furloughed employees alone would amount to roughly $400 million a day.
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