U.S. House lawmakers return to vote on a bill to end the longest federal government shutdown in U.S. history.

The amended package will still have to be passed by the House and sent to Trump for his signature, a process that could take days

The longest shutdown in US history appears to be drawing to a close, leaving Democrats divided and Trump's hard line paying off.

Some Democrats are fuming over the Senate government funding deal because it drops a key demand: securing an extension of soon-to-expire Obamacare subsidies.

The GOP-controlled House is expected to pass the legislation later this week and end the longest government shutdown in history.

The 60-40 vote would end the longest government shutdown in US history

It will need to be approved by the House and then signed into law by the president before the government can reopen.

The measure still needs to be approved by the House and signed by US President Donald Trump.

The Senate approved a deal to end the nation's longest-ever government shutdown, putting Congress on the brink of resolving a weeks-long fight.

Republican-controlled House of Representatives expected to approve funding bill to reopen US government in coming days.

Republicans sound confident the bill will pass, despite their narrow majority. Democrats vow to oppose it.

The House of Representatives will hold a session to vote on legislation to end the longest shutdown in US history.

Most Democrats, who are in the minority in Congress, oppose the funding bill because it does not include extending enhanced ACA tax credits.

U.S. House lawmakers return to vote on a bill to end the longest federal government shutdown in U.S. history.

Democratic party leaders said they would continue to fight, while others said they should not have stopped.

President Donald Trump is expected to sign the bill Wednesday, ending the longest government shutdown in the history of the United States.

Once signed by President Donald Trump, the spending bill will reopen the government after 43 days.

The successful vote means the long-delayed bill has now been passed on to President Trump to sign into law.

Measure to restart federal operations passes narrowly, but excludes healthcare funding demanded by Democrats

The document was supported by 222 lawmakers, while 209 voted against it

President Donald Trump signed a bill Wednesday that ended the longest government shutdown in the history of the United States.