By Andy Sullivan, David Morgan, Bo Erickson and Nolan D. McCaskill
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. government is due to lumber back to life on Thursday after the longest shutdown in U.S. history snarled air traffic, cut food assistance to low-income Americans and forced more than 1 million workers to go unpaid for more than a month.
But the deep political divisions that caused the 43-day shutdown in the first place remain unresolved.
The funding package contains few guardrails to restrain Republican President Donald Trump from withholding spending, in an administration that has regularly challenged Congress’ constitutional authority over money. And it does not address the soon-to-expire health subsidies that led Senate Democrats to begin the shutdown in the first place.
The shutdown als

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