If the procedural vote in the U.S. Senate is successful, the U.S. government could end the shutdown as soon as tomorrow night.
BlockBeats News, November 10th, the US Senate is currently holding a procedural vote to end the government shutdown, currently only 1 vote away from passing.
According to relevant information, after the procedural vote is passed, the Senate must amend three appropriations bills (legislative, military construction, and agriculture, including the SNAP program), and then send them back to the House of Representatives. Each amendment will trigger a 30-hour debate period, which may delay the process.
If the Democrats choose to extend these debates, the government may not reopen until Wednesday or Thursday, but if they give up the time, the "end of the government shutdown" process could be completed tonight, and the US government could reopen tomorrow night. The current filibuster rules may significantly impact the timeline.
You may also like
A valuation of 8 billion dollars, doubling in 8 months! What makes the crypto-friendly bank Erebor Bank stand out?
340 billion valuation: Li Yanhong's largest IPO, a seat in Kunlunxin's shares is hard to come by
Stablecoins are the "royalists" of the crypto world: Open USD brings the old currency system into play
Semiconductor stocks plummet, yet Anthropic wants to create a 2nm chip
Where is Zhao Changpeng's billion-dollar investment going? YZi Labs' investment landscape fully revealed
Ethereum Foundation Report: A Basic Guide to Ethereum for Governments and Financial Institutions
A pre-announced harvesting case: After the cryptocurrency price dropped by 99%, the public chain Saga exited to transform into AI
When American giants collectively "defect" from Chinese AI models
BIS Report Compliance Observation: The Real Risks of Stablecoins, Not Just "Depegging"
Portugal 2-1 Croatia: Ronaldo's 20-Year Knockout-Stage Drought Ends With a Debt Finally Collected
Portugal beat Croatia 2-1 in the 2026 global football championship's knockout rounds as Ronaldo scored his first-ever knockout-stage goal, Gonçalo Ramos struck a stoppage-time winner, and VAR ruled out a late equalizer for offside.
