The Senate has been voting for the last hour or so to move forward with consideration of the continuing resolution passed by the House last night. Sen. Jeff Flake (R-AZ) so far is the only Republican to oppose, saying "If we're going to proceed, let's proceed to something that can pass." Another Republican, Sen. Bob Corker (R-TN) is waiting for more senators to get to the chamber before deciding whether he’ll vote for it, saying "the bill will fail everyone knows that."
Since it appeared that their work was done Wednesday night, before Individual 1 decided to have another tantrum and change his mind about signing it, many senators left D.C. early Thursday, and are still in transit back.
Presuming they proceed to a full vote, it will not get the necessary 60 votes to pass. Republicans also aren't going to go nuclear, as Trump is yelling at them to do, because they don't have enough votes to do that in their own caucus, either. That's in part because they're looking ahead to when the Democrats have the Senate (looking likelier by the hour) they'll be utterly screwed. Now would actually be a great time for progressives for the filibuster to go away, with Democrats set to take the House, but it isn't going to happen. McConnell made that very clear while meeting with Trump Friday morning.
Perhaps to mollify an enraged Trump, McConnell did his damnedest on this, going full border wall in his floor statement before the vote, supporting the $5 billion border funding that should be "non controversial" and "not a radical concept." Indeed he said, it's just the "far left" that opposes it.
Which makes anywhere from 57 percent to 69 percent of American voters who say the would rather see the government open than a wall part of that far left.