The government will shut down on Friday unless the Senate agrees to pass a bipartisan House bill that has been weeks in the making.

The bill, which would appropriate $1.1 billion in funding to fight the Zika virus, among other provisions, contains several significant compromises on the part of Republicans. But the Democrats continue to demand more.

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Democrats filibustered the original bill for Zika funding, stopping it dead before the congressional recess this summer. This meant the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had almost no funding to fight Zika during the summer. As of August, the CDC had spent $194 million of the $222 million it received in funding.

To keep the search for a vaccine alive in the interim, $81 million was pulled from biomedical and antipoverty research and given to organizations fighting Zika.

The Senate Democrats already blocked a House-approved bill when Congress reconvened earlier this month. Liberals were offended at the bill because it wouldn’t allocate funds to Planned Parenthood clinics for the distribution of contraceptives. Since Zika can be transmitted sexually as well as by mosquitoes, Democrats defended Planned Parenthood with zeal.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has been working tirelessly to create a bipartisan bill to satisfy people on both sides of the fence. He has bridged this disagreement by clarifying that money could be used for contraceptives but that it must in no way fund abortion procedures.

Related: Looming Zika Infant Epidemic

But Democrats, it seems, live in a perpetual sense of outrage. In addition to Zika funding, the current bill allocates money to keep the government running, provides relief to victims of the Louisiana floods, battles the opioid crisis, and funds the Department of Veterans Affairs. The progressive party is complaining, however, that no money has been allocated to the citizens of Flint, Michigan, who have been struggling with lead in their water for months.

Never mind that a separate bill that approves major water projects — and will help Flint — has already passed the Senate and is up for a vote in the House.

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The Zika problem has reached epidemic proportions in the United States. The U.S. now has 3,358 reported cases of people infected with Zika. About 750 of those people are pregnant women. The virus has been shown to collapse babies’ brains during development, a condition known as microcephaly. Scientists are still discovering the long-term ramifications of this severe birth defect.

The statistics in U.S. territories are even worse. More than 1,300 pregnant women are infected in Puerto Rico. For these women and children, the funding is already too late.

“The Democrats need to wake up and vote the right way to get this passed because the money is running out for both killing the mosquitoes and the research [that needs] to be done on the issue of the vaccine,” said Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) in a statement before the vote.

Related: Big, Bad Zika Gets Its Own Health Centers

If the Senate approves this new bill, the House will vote on it this week.