A short-lived partial government shutdown ended Tuesday with the House voting to approve a Senate-brokered compromise. The vast majority of the government will now be funded for the rest of the year — but not the Department of Homeland Security. The final vote highlighted both the narrow path that Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is walking, and how little help he can expect from the minority Democrats as the spotlight shifts to President Donald Trump’s immigration agenda.
With that kind of margin of error, most partisan measures are only a hair’s breadth away from failure at any given time.
The Senate-amended package on the House floor Tuesday in theory should have had bipartisan support. Appropriators from both chambers negotiated the bills weeks ago, including funding for the Pentagon and Department of Health and Human Services. But the DHS spending bill became a nonstarter for Democrats in the aftermath of federal officers killing Alex Pretti in Minnesota late last month.
An agreement between Trump and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., paved the way to pass the bulk of the bills along with a two-week extension of funding for the Department of Homeland Security. Many in the House Republican caucus weren’t thrilled with the deal’s seeming capitulation to Democrats on immigration enforcement. Axios reported Monday that it took wrangling from Trump to help get Johnson’s ducks in a row ahead of a major procedural hurdle.
The White House’s intervention on key House votes has been a defining feature of Johnson’s speakership given the historically slim majority Republicans hold. With the Monday swearing-in of Texas Democrat Rep. Christian Menefee, and two Republican-held seats currently vacant, the GOP will now have a one-vote margin for the next few months at least. As my colleague Steve Benen framed the matter, “If every member is present and one GOP member breaks ranks, the result would be a 217-215 vote. But if two GOP members break ranks, the result would a 216-216 vote — and in the House, a tie vote is a failed vote.”
With that kind of margin of error, most partisan measures are only a hair’s breadth away from failure at any given time. Johnson’s initial hope then was that the GOP would be able to skip the Rules Committee and bring the bill directly to the floor via a procedure known as a suspension of the rules. It’s a maneuver that has worked in the past to bypass the risk of a shutdown in the face of Republican members who typically balk at short-term funding bills.
But according to Politico, Johnson made the mistake of presuming Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries would simply go along with his thinking, leaving members of the minority “caught unaware — with some downright livid — at Johnson’s confidence that he could pass the bill under that process:”
Such a move generally requires tacit agreement from minority party leaders to supply the votes. But Republicans at that point hadn’t asked their Democratic counterparts for a more formal private count of how many Democrats might support the measure, according to three people granted anonymity to discuss the sensitive matter.








