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House speaker says shutdown ‘barreling towards one of longest on record’ as it enters day 14 – US politics live | US news

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Government shutdown enters day 14, as House speaker says it’s ‘barreling toward one of the longest on record’

The government shutdown enters its 14th day, with little end in sight. On Monday, Republican House speaker, Mike Johnson, said it was “barreling toward one of the longest shutdowns in American history”.

A reminder that the longest government shutdown on record lasted 35 days, during Trump’s first administration.

Johnson will host a press conference at 10am ET today, where we’ll bring you the latest. Meanwhile, Democratic lawmakers will also speak to the media at 11am ET on Capitol Hill.

The Senate is poised to take up the dueling funding bills – that have failed to clear the upper chamber repeatedly – later today. Votes are currently scheduled for 5:30pm ET.

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Former top CDC official says reversal of mass firings is causing ‘instability and confusion’

Melody Schreiber

More than a thousand employees at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) received notice that they were losing their jobs on Friday in a move that erased entire offices and was partially reversed over the weekend.

It caused “instability and whiplash”, said Debra Houry, former chief medical officer at the CDC.

About 700 reduction in force (RIF) notifications were sent to employees in error, the Trump administration reportedly says, though there does not seem to be public evidence of an error. Another 600 terminated employees have not been reinstated.

“It seems like they just took a sledgehammer to the agency versus a scalpel,” Houry said. “The fact they brought half back already just shows they didn’t think through what they were doing.”

The entire staff of the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR), a highly respected epidemiology journal, were terminated and then reinstated. So were employees working on global health and suicide prevention, as well as “disease detectives” and staff at the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases.

But the entire human resources department is still gone, which will affect operations of the entire agency.

The Washington office is still cut, which “makes it difficult to communicate with Congress”, since they were the main channel for congressional inquiries, Houry said.

Staff with the CDC’s institutional review board, which reviews the design of studies, and the ethics office and oversees all conflicts and interests for CDC leaders and advisory committee members, were also let go.

In the next 30 days, some science protocols will be up for renewal by the institutional review board.

“They’ll have to be shut down,” Houry said.

Read more of Melody’s report below.

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