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Wednesday, October 01, 2025

US government shutdown begins as partisan division rules Washington


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US government shutdown begins as partisan division rules Washington



The shutdown has halted critical economic data releases and affected federal workers, with analysts warning it could last longer than previous closures


A view of the US Capitol Building at Washington, DC, where the Senate rejected short-term spending measure in a last-ditch effort to avert a shutdown. (EPA Images pic)


WASHINGTON: The U.S. government shut down much of its operations on Wednesday as deep partisan divisions prevented Congress and the White House from reaching a funding deal, setting off what could be a long, grueling standoff that could lead to the loss of thousands of federal jobs.

There was no clear path out of the impasse, while agencies warned that the 15th government shutdown since 1981 would halt the release of a closely watched September employment report, slow air travel, suspend scientific research, withhold pay from U.S. troops and lead to the furlough of 750,000 federal workers at a daily cost of $400 million.

Trump, whose campaign to radically reshape the federal government is already on track to push out some 300,000 workers by December, warned congressional Democrats that a shutdown could clear the path for “irreversible” actions including cutting more jobs and programs.


The shutdown commenced hours after the Senate rejected a short-term spending measure that would have kept government operations afloat through Nov 21. Democrats opposed the legislation over Republicans’ refusal to attach an extension of health benefits for millions of Americans that are due to expire at the end of the year. Republicans say the issue must be addressed separately.

At issue on the government funding front is US$1.7 trillion for agency operations, which amounts to roughly one-quarter of the government’s total US$7 trillion budget. Much of the remainder goes to health and retirement programs and interest payments on the growing US$37.5 trillion debt.

Independent analysts warn the shutdown could last longer than the budget-related closures of the past, with Trump and White House officials threatening to punish Democrats with cuts to government programs and the federal payroll. Trump budget director Russell Vought, who has called for “less bipartisan” appropriations, threatened permanent layoffs last week in the event of a shutdown.

Record dates to first Trump term

The longest government shutdown in U.S. history stretched over 35 days during December 2018 and January 2019 during Trump’s first term in office, in a dispute over border security.

“All they want to do is try to bully us. And they’re not going to succeed,” Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said in a floor speech a day after a White House meeting with Trump and other congressional leaders that ended with the two parties far apart.


Senate Majority Leader John Thune described the failed short-term spending bill as a “nonpartisan” measure devoid of partisan policy riders that Democrats have had no problem accepting in years past.

“What’s changed is, President Trump is in the White House. That’s what this is about. This is politics. And there isn’t any substantive reason why there ought to be a government shutdown,” the South Dakota Republican told reporters.

Trump’s Republicans hold majorities in both chambers of Congress, but legislative rules require 60 of the 100 senators to agree on spending legislation. That means that at least seven Democrats are needed to pass a funding bill.

Democrats focus on healthcare funding

Democrats are under pressure from their frustrated supporters to score a rare victory ahead of the 2026 midterm elections that will determine control of Congress for the final two years of Trump’s term.

The healthcare push has given them a chance to unite behind an issue that resonates with voters.

Along with the extended health subsidies, Democrats have also sought to ensure that Trump will not be able to undo those changes if they are signed into law. Trump has refused to spend billions of dollars approved by Congress, prompting some Democrats to question why they should vote for any spending legislation at all.

University of Chicago professor Robert Pape said the unusually polarized U.S. political climate in the aftermath of conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s assassination and the growing power on the extreme wings of both parties could make it harder for party leaders to agree on a deal to reopen the government.

“The rules of politics are radically changing and we can’t know for sure where all of this is going to end,” said University of Chicago political science professor Robert Pape, who studies political violence.

“Each side would have to backtrack against tens of millions of truly aggressive supporters, their own constituents, which is going to be really hard for them to do,” he said.

Before the shutdown, Trump reached out to his own supporters with a deepfake video showing manipulated images of Schumer appearing to criticize Democrats while top House Democrat Hakeem Jeffries stood next to him, with a crudely drawn sombrero and mustache imposed over his face.

“It was childish. It was petty,” Schumer told reporters. “It’s something that a 5-year-old would do, not a president of the United States. But it shows how unserious they are. They don’t give a damn about the harm they will cause with their shutdown.”


4 comments:

  1. There are drones warfare. And there are social media bots trolling and swarming attack in the account of interest.

    X has forced every profile to justify their type of profile. Il Donaldo Trumpo X got a Parody Account classification for clarification. And the following account got classified as Automated.

    https://x.com/nahuacapital/status/1973238988401156164?s=19

    Controlling all branches and still no resolution? Wild + 2 government shutdowns too? Lol

    ReplyDelete
  2. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/government-shutdown-2025-travel-tsa-faa/

    How could a government shutdown affect travel around the U.S.?

    By Megan Cerullo
    Edited By Alain Sherter
    Updated on: October 1, 2025 / 12:28 AM EDT / CBS News

    Although a short U.S. government shutdown would be unlikely to have much impact on air travel, a prolonged impasse could lead to disruptions for passengers and financial losses for businesses, according to travel experts and industry groups.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The President and the majority party in the House of Representatives and the Senate all can't get the spending Bill through - it'sTHEIR problem, not anybody else's.

    Democracy, unlike Communism / Dictatorship requires compromise...Which Fuck refused to.

    ReplyDelete
  4. https://x.com/JoeLang51440671/status/1973376376896929931?s=19

    Safeguards are important.

    “As Washington enters a government shutdown, the Trump administration has erected safeguards to ensure President Donald Trump’s most hardline priorities continue unscathed.
    Agencies central to Trump’s agenda are shielding certain programs by declaring the federal employees who work on them essential or sheltering them under already approved funding streams — designations that will allow them to keep running through the funding lapse.”

    Trump welcomes this government shutdown and has prepared in advance.

    “The split underscores how Trump hopes to punish Democrats by pinning the fallout on them while ensuring his own priorities continue unimpeded. It’s also the latest example of how his administration uses the levers of federal power in unprecedented ways to enact the president’s expansive policy agenda.
    “Remember Rahm Emanuel’s great quote: ‘You should never waste a crisis,’” said former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. “Rahm Emanuel should be proud of the Trump team because they’re prepared to say, ‘Every day this is shut, we will find ways to pay for everything we want. We’ll find ways to eliminate everything you want. And we’ll do it legally.’”

    Trump is making sure that his important policies continue uninterrupted, while ALL the democrat priorities take the hit.
    That is why there were many democrats quietly fretting about a shutdown.
    The democrats take photo ops and pretend they are unified in this shutdown, but it’s all a charade.

    They will cave and everyone already knows it.
    It’s just a matter of time.

    Even the New York Times was trying to warn them ahead of time, not to shut the government down.

    “While the party controlling Washington typically suffers politically during a shutdown, polling shows significant peril for Democrats: A new New York Times-Siena College poll found that 65 percent of respondents, including 43 percent of Democrats, think Democrats shouldn’t allow a government shutdown, even if their demands aren’t met.”

    politico.com/news/2025/10/0…

    That poll is certainly biased towards the democrats, so their numbers are surely worse.
    Meanwhile, Trump is going to bludgeon the democrats every day with his bully pulpit until they cave.
    The longer it goes, the more support the democrats will lose.

    I hope it goes on for weeks and weeks.

    It would also be a great time to arrest some corrupt members of Congress.

    Just sayin…😁

    ReplyDelete