Senate to hold test vote after talks on possible government funding compromise
The Senate is staying in tomorrow for a relatively rare Friday session. Majority Leader John Thune told members in a separate closed door lunch that he plans to put up, for a 15th time, a short-term funding bill that would reopen the government.
If Democrats provide 60 votes, there's a number of changes that senators are hoping to make to the bill.
The bipartisan group of rank-and-file senators who have been negotiating a way out of the shutdown are mulling over a number of modifications to the bill. Lawmakers are expected to attempt to change the date that the short-term extension of government funding expires to a yet-to-be-determined later day.

There's also been ongoing discussion about including a package of full-year funding bills in the short-term package that would insure certain programs, including SNAP and veterans programs, are funded through September.
That group has also been in discussion over language that might reverse some of the layoffs of federal employees that the Trump administration imposed as a result of the shutdown. This discussion, which is extremely preliminary and which has not been blessed be leadership, has also been about whether language to prevent future reductions in force could be part of the package.
-ABC News' Allison Pecorin, Rachel Scott and John Parkinson







