Updated 9:20 p.m. | Even though Congress has voted to reopen the government after a brief shutdown, House Democratic leaders, who didn’t sign off on the deal their Senate counterparts helped negotiate, plan to continue their push on immigration and spending issues with a key leverage point: the budget caps.

The House on Monday evening quickly passed a stopgap funding bill that will reopen the government through Feb. 8 by a 266-150 vote, sending the bill to President Donald Trump, who signed the continuing resolution that night.

The CR largely mirrors one the House passed Thursday. That measure stalled in the Senate, leading to a three-day partial government shutdown.

The major change the Senate sent back to the House would move up the end date of the CR from Feb. 16. It retains the original language funding the Children’s Health Insurance Program for six years and delaying enactment of three health care taxes that were enacted as part of the 2010 law.

Watch: 17 Days to Negotiate Another Deal