Government shutdown Day 3: Johnson, Thune hold press conference as Senate prepares vote
On Day 3 of the partial government shutdown, House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune held a joint news conference as the Senate prepared to gavel and vote on competing stopgap measures — the GOP bill to fund the government roughly flat through Nov. 21 and a Democratic alternative to extend funding to Oct. 31 while making ACA premium tax credits permanent — with the chamber briefly recessed for Yom Kippur and expected to resume votes Friday. Thune said he needs about eight to ten senators to break the impasse and may send members home if the GOP measure fails, while partisan accusations over whether Democrats would restore healthcare to undocumented immigrants (which Senate Democrats have called a "total, absolute, effing lie") persisted and the White House warned of likely federal layoffs as OMB paused $2.1 billion in Chicago transit projects.
🔍 Key Facts
- The government entered its third day of a shutdown on Oct. 3, 2025; Senate leaders scheduled votes Friday (the chamber was expected to gavel about 11:30 a.m. EDT) and House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune held a joint news conference that morning as the Senate prepared another vote on a stopgap measure.
- There are two competing stopgaps: the House‑passed GOP continuing resolution would fund the government roughly flat through Nov. 21 (including about $88 million for enhanced security) and is being brought to the Senate for a vote; Democrats pushed a short‑term continuing resolution through Oct. 31 that would extend pandemic‑era ACA premium subsidies/make expiring premium tax credits permanent, reverse recent Medicaid cuts and restore funding to outlets like NPR and PBS, but that effort was blocked when unanimous consent was objected to.
- Senate Majority Leader John Thune said he needs roughly eight to 10 senators to break the impasse, indicated he is unlikely to keep senators in town over the weekend if the GOP measure fails, and planned to bring the GOP CR up for another vote Friday.
- The dispute has become intensely partisan: House and White House Republicans accused Democrats of pushing healthcare expansions that would benefit undocumented immigrants (claims amplified on social media by some White House figures), while Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and other Democrats strongly denied that characterization and called the claims false.
- Operational impacts and immediate consequences were reported: federal furloughs have begun, the Department of Education had employees' out‑of‑office messages altered to blame "Democrat Senators," OMB paused $2.1 billion in Chicago transit projects, the White House warned mass federal layoffs could be in the thousands, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics may withhold the September jobs report if the shutdown continues; unions have filed suit challenging proposed layoffs.
- White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the administration supports a "clean" continuing resolution, is meeting with OMB to identify spending cuts, and is trying to pick off moderate Democrats to reach 60 votes in the Senate.
- There were early signs of bipartisan engagement on the Senate floor: nearly a dozen senators publicly huddled, Sen. Richard Blumenthal called it a "glimmer of hope," and Thune said he expected to speak with Schumer about negotiations — but floor activity was minimal Thursday as many observed Yom Kippur.
📍 Contextual Background
- OMB is the abbreviation for the Office of Management and Budget, an office within the executive branch of the United States federal government responsible for assisting the President in preparing the federal budget and supervising its administration in executive agencies.
📰 Sources (13)
- House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune scheduled a joint news conference for 11:00 a.m. EDT on Oct. 3, 2025.
- Senate Majority Leader John Thune was quoted saying he needs 'eight or hopefully more — 10 or more' senators to break the impasse.
- The Senate was expected to gavel at 11:30 a.m. EDT for another funding vote (live/ongoing coverage confirmation).
- Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought announced a pause of $2.1 billion for Chicago transit projects (Red Line Extension and Red and Purple Modernization) via a post on X.
- White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt warned that mass federal layoffs are 'likely going to be in the thousands.'
- The Senate is expected to hold additional procedural and funding votes Friday afternoon (after 1:30 p.m.) on both the House‑passed GOP stopgap (through Nov. 21) and the Democratic alternative (through Oct. 31) that would make expiring ACA premium tax credits permanent.
- Senate Majority Leader John Thune said it's 'unlikely' the Senate will work through the weekend if the Republican measure fails to advance; the chamber observed Yom Kippur and did not vote Thursday.
- Senate Majority Leader John Thune said he would send senators home for the weekend if Democrats again block the GOP stopgap, indicating Senate schedule plans for Oct. 3–6, 2025.
- The article reports the Bureau of Labor Statistics is likely to withhold the September jobs report if the shutdown continues.
- President Trump posted mocking social‑media messages late Thursday that the article links to the heightened partisan tenor around the shutdown.
- Department of Education furloughed workers had their out‑of‑office email messages changed without their knowledge to include partisan language blaming 'Democrat Senators.'
- Shutdown has progressed into its third day (update on duration).
- Senate Majority Leader John Thune plans to bring the GOP continuing resolution up for another vote on Friday.
- Senate floor activity was minimal Thursday (open less than three hours) as many lawmakers observed Yom Kippur.
- Thune indicated he does not plan to keep lawmakers in town over the weekend if the House GOP bill fails again; Schumer and most Senate Democrats continue to insist ACA premium tax credits be addressed now.
- House Majority Whip Tom Emmer publicly accused Senate Democrats and Chuck Schumer of shutting down the government to restore healthcare (Medicaid) to undocumented immigrants, calling Schumer a 'scared old man' in quoted remarks.
- Emmer asserted the Senate Democrats' alternative proposal would remove verification requirements and 'put 1.4 million illegals back on Medicaid,' citing a CBO estimate as the basis for the figure.
- Emmer tied the verification changes to the Working Families Tax Cut Act (aka 'One Big Beautiful Bill') and predicted political consequences for Democratic leadership (specifically Schumer).
- White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt gave on‑the‑record NPR interview (Oct. 2/3) saying the administration must look for cuts and is meeting with OMB to identify spending savings amid the shutdown.
- Leavitt reiterated that President Trump supported a 'clean' continuing resolution and said the White House is trying to 'pick off' moderate Democrats to reach 60 votes.
- Article mentions the administration's proposal of layoffs for a prolonged shutdown and notes unions have filed a lawsuit challenging those proposed layoffs.
- On-the-record framing that Republicans are 'relishing' a role reversal in which GOP leaders implore Democrats to reopen the government
- Direct quotes from Speaker Mike Johnson urging reopening and saying 'We want to protect hardworking federal workers.'
- Identification of Sen. Rand Paul as the lone Republican opposing the GOP-backed short-term continuing resolution, and on-the-record quotes from VP J.D. Vance supporting reopening
- Direct on‑the‑record interview quotes from House Speaker Mike Johnson accusing Sen. Chuck Schumer of refusing to vote to end the shutdown to appease the far‑left.
- Johnson said Democrats had voted on a similar measure 13 times under the prior administration and framed the current refusal as a "selfish political calculation."
- Johnson reported discussing the issue with President Trump and said Trump was 'very bothered' by Schumer's stance.
- A group of nearly a dozen senators publicly huddled on the Senate floor — described as the first visible bipartisan negotiations since the shutdown began.
- Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D‑Conn.) was quoted directly: "There are glimmers of hope, and I think they're bipartisan."
- Senate Majority Leader John Thune said he expected to speak with Sen. Chuck Schumer 'in the next day or two,' indicating leaders may open formal talks.
- Senators noted the Senate will recess for Yom Kippur and is expected to return Friday, with the possibility of votes into the weekend on a CR that would extend funding to Nov. 21.
- Direct, on‑the‑record quote from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer calling GOP claims a 'total, absolute, effing lie.'
- Identification of specific White House figures (Karoline Leavitt and Stephen Miller) who posted on X asserting Democrats wanted healthcare for undocumented immigrants and were blocking funding.
- Schumer outlined two Democratic priorities during the shutdown: negotiating healthcare fixes for Americans and mounting public political pressure (TV, social media, protests).
- Direct transcript-style quotes from Speaker Mike Johnson accusing Democrats of prioritizing healthcare for 'illegal aliens' over funding the government.
- Johnson's claim that '44 Senate Democrats voted to reject a clean, non-partisan, continuing-funding resolution' and his framing tying the CR dispute to Medicaid/ACA changes.
- ABC anchor George Stephanopoulos' on-air rebuttal that the Democratic proposal does not make illegal immigrants eligible for ACA subsidies, with an explicit back-and-forth recorded.
- Democrats sought unanimous consent to pass a short-term continuing resolution extending funding to Oct. 31 with policy riders.
- Rep. Warren Davidson (R‑OH) was identified as the Republican poised to object to unanimous consent; Rep. Morgan Griffith (R‑VA) presiding gavelled the pro‑forma session out, ending the effort.
- The article details Democrats' specific demands: extension of pandemic-era ACA premium subsidies, reversal of recent Medicaid cuts, and restoring federal funding to NPR and PBS.
- Notes the House‑passed GOP CR would fund the government roughly flat until Nov. 21 and includes about $88 million for enhanced security for lawmakers, the White House and the judiciary.