USDA says SNAP benefits won't be issued on Nov. 1
A notice on top of its website says "the well has run dry."
The Department of Agriculture has posted a notice on its website warning that Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits won't be issued on Nov. 1.
"Bottom line, the well has run dry," reads the notice, which also blames Democrats for the second-longest shutdown in U.S. history.
Republican and Democratic lawmakers remain at a stalemate on finding a government funding solution. The Senate has continued to fail to advance bill that would reopen the government until Nov. 21. The House remains out of session next week.
Key Headlines
IRS to furlough nearly half its staff as 'most IRS operations are closed'
The IRS said it will furlough nearly half of its workforce as "most IRS operations are closed" due to the lapse in funding.
According to the IRS contingency plan released Wednesday, out of 74,299 employees, 39,870 would be retained as exempt, while 34,429 would be furloughed.
The plan states that work related to protecting government property and revenue will continue, including processing tax returns with payments, maintaining online systems and operating taxpayer verification services. Most other operations like taxpayer assistance and audits would pause until funding is restored.
-ABC News' Will Steakin
Shutdown continues as GOP, Democrat funding plans fail to advance in Senate
The Senate on Wednesday held a sixth round of votes on dueling measures from Republicans and Democrats to fund the government. Both attempts to advance legislation failed, with the shutdown now stretching into its eighth day.
The Democratic-led government funding bill that includes health care provisions failed by a vote of 47-52. As was the case the previous five times the bill was voted on, no Republican supported it.
The GOP-led government funding bill that would reopen the government until Nov. 21 also failed to get the 60 votes needed, with the final tally being 54-45.
IRS sends furlough notices, sparks some confusion among staff: Sources
Employees at the IRS received an agency-wide email on Wednesday morning informing them that staff who are not "excepted or exempt" are being furloughed effective immediately due to the lapse in funding, according to an email obtained by ABC News and multiple sources.
The memo states that while all employees were receiving the notice, some staff are "excepted or exempt from the furlough based on their specific duties" and would receive separate instructions from their divisions. Unless employees were specifically notified otherwise, David Traynor, Acting IRS Human Capital Officer wrote, "you are being furloughed beginning October 8, 2025," and are instructed to cease work and enter non-pay, non-duty status.
The email to IRS staff also states that furloughed federal workers are legally entitled to receive full back pay once funding is restored, citing the Government Employee Fair Treatment Act of 2019. Trump has threatened not to give furloughed workers back pay, despite the law.
Multiple sources inside the IRS told ABC News the rollout of the furlough order has been "very chaotic," with some workers being left confused over whether they were exempted from the furlough, given they were told before the agency-wide notice and not afterward.
Sources told ABC News that some employees who had already left, assuming they were furloughed, were later called back, while others were told to "sit tight" as managers awaited clarification on who should keep working.
The Treasury Department and IRS did not respond to a request for comment. It's unclear exactly how many IRS staffers were furloughed but sources told ABC News multiple departments were impacted.
-ABC News' Will Steakin, Benjamin Siegel and Olivia Rubin
Leader blame game continues on Senate floor ahead of another vote
Ahead of the sixth scheduled vote in the Senate on government funding, both Majority Leader John Thune and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer continued with the across-the-aisle blame.
There doesn't appear to be much movement in resolving the shutdown impasse.
Schumer, in remarks on the floor Wednesday morning, again branded this as "Donald Trump's government shutdown." Democrats, he said, "want to reopen the government right away," but require a "serious negotiation to fix health care" to do so.
But Thune followed up by knocking the Democrats' shutdown strategy. Thune argued that the GOP-led clean funding bill was passed by the House, has majority support in the Senate and would be signed by President Donald Trump while the Democratic proposal would not.
"We are now in day 8 of a government shutdown, which is truly unfortunate and unnecessary and totally at the behest of left-wing Democrat special interest groups who have pressured the Democrat leadership into a position that makes absolutely no sense to any thinking person," Thune said.
-Allison Pecorin