Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Trump signs spending bill that ends four-day government shutdown

U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA ) speaks with reporters as he departs meeting with members of the House Rules Committee, at the U.S. Capitol on day three of a partial government shutdown in Washington on Feb. 2, 2026. (REUTERS/Al Drago)

U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA ) speaks with reporters as he departs meeting with members of the House Rules Committee, at the U.S. Capitol on day three of a partial government shutdown in Washington on Feb. 2, 2026. (REUTERS/Al Drago)

Trump signs spending bill that ends four-day government shutdown

Listen to this article

WASHINGTON – President Donald on Tuesday signed a spending deal into law that ends a partial U.S. and gives lawmakers time to negotiate potential limits on his crackdown.

The legislation restores lapsed funding for defense, healthcare, labor, education, housing and other agencies, and temporarily extends funding for the Department of until February 13.

Funding for those agencies expired on Saturday as did not act in time to avert a shutdown, which has not resulted in major disruptions for government services so far.

Trump negotiated the spending deal last week with Senate Democrats, who are demanding new restraints on Trump’s aggressive immigration enforcement tactics following the killing of two U.S. citizens by federal agents in Minneapolis last month.

Trump’s administration is already deploying body cameras on immigration agents in Minnesota, partially acceding to one of the Democrats’ demands. Other Democratic proposals will face more resistance.

The deal passed the Senate by a wide bipartisan margin last week and narrowly passed the House of Representatives earlier on Tuesday by a vote of 217-214.

The last shutdown lasted a record 43 days in October and November, furloughing hundreds of thousands of federal workers and costing the U.S. economy an estimated $11 billion.

Reporting by Bo Erickson, David Morgan and Richard Cowan; editing by Andy Sullivan, Chizu Nomiyama and Mark Porter.

This story has been updated.