Skip to main content

Golden votes to avoid harmful government shutdown, pledges continued work to prevent health care price spikes

September 19, 2025

WASHINGTON — Congressman Jared Golden (ME-02) today voted in favor of a Continuing Resolution (CR) to keep government funded until November 21, preventing a government shutdown on October 1, when the current funding law expires. 

Unlike many previous stopgap funding bills, the CR contains no major changes to federal policies, programs or current spending levels. The bill passed the House 217-212. 

“There’s a lot of important work to be done in Congress, none of which will be any easier if Mainers are suffering the harms of a government shutdown,” Golden said. “At the top of my mind are critical conversations around the need to prevent health care price spikes and lost coverage for millions of Americans.

“With the Republican trifecta, there's no path forward on health care without GOP support. That’s why I remain focused on my bipartisan effort to extend the ACA enhanced premium tax credits that make coverage affordable for Mainers,” Golden said. “This clean, short-term CR will keep the lights on and give us more time to set policies and funding levels for the future.”

A federal government shutdown would have immediate effects on Mainers, particularly the more than 11,000 federal employees who would be either furloughed or forced to work without pay. Acadia National Park would likely be forced to close, jeopardizing the shoulder season for small businesses and workers, while federal food assistance, housing assistance, small business support and other programs could be paused. 

A shutdown also would give President Donald Trump and the executive branch extraordinary leeway in determining which aspects of government are “essential,” and which can be shuttered. 

Meanwhile, Mainers are facing massive health care cuts as a result of the partisan reconciliation bill enacted by Republicans this summer. The most immediate concern is spiking premiums on track to hit tens of thousands of Mainers who buy health insurance on the state’s individual marketplace, coverME.gov, when enhanced premium tax credits expire in January. 

Roughly 85 percent of Mainers who buy coverage on the marketplace use tax credits to help afford their coverage. If Congress does not act, those Mainers face a $180 average monthly premium increase in January, with rural Mainers aged 60-64 facing the sharpest increase. 

Golden is leading efforts to extend the tax credits through 2026

###