UPDATE - 9 p.m. EST: A White House official confirmed that President Trump has signed the bill funding the government through Feb. 8, ending the government shutdown at 69 hours.

Earlier in the day, Congress approved a bipartisan plan Monday to end the government shutdown. For the Senate, it includes assurances that the DACA issue will be taken up next month, but whether it will make it through the House is another matter.

The Senate approved ending a possible filibuster 81-18. It later passed the deal in a final vote Monday afternoon. The House then passed that bill through.  

Senators were supposed to vote at 1 a.m. Monday, but their vote was moved to noon.  

Lawmakers debated late into the night on how to reach a deal.

Around two dozen lawmakers, including Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Florida, spent the weekend behind closed-doors, looking for a compromise.

Nelson tweeted the following Monday:

The deal includes funding the government for three weeks, with guarantees of votes on DACA and other issues. If a deal is not reached by Feb. 8, the government will shut down again.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said Democrats agreed to back the bill reopening government after he and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell agreed to begin debating an immigration bill by Feb. 8.

Democrats lined up to vote on the deal, but the progressive wing is not happy about the bill, fearing they did not get enough assurances that the Dreamer issue will be saved.

The House would still have to vote on the new deal, and then subsequent DACA bills.

Already some Florida representatives are indicating where they stand on the measure, and a split can be seen among Democrats so far.

Immigration reform continues to be sticking points for passing a bill. Democrats want Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) saved, while Republicans say they are holding American workers and the military hostage with politics.

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio tweeted:

However, Sen. Bill Nelson says his issues with the spending bill go further than just immigration.

Meanwhile, thousands of federal employees are being placed on furlough, meaning they will not report for work.

More than a million civilian federal workers are exempt from furlough, like Transportation Security Administration agents and prison guards.

So that means you will likely have trouble entering federal parks or museums while the shutdown remains.