Trump
turns shutdown into weapon against blue America
The
president's detractors say he’s following his scorched-earth playbook by
cutting projects in liberal states.
By
Melanie Mason and Nick Reisman
10/03/2025
05:00 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/10/03/trump-shutdown-weapon-blue-america-00592573
LOS
ANGELES —The government shutdown is opening a new front in Donald Trump’s
scorched-earth approach to power, with the president weaponizing the impasse to
punish heavily-Democratic cities and states.
Trump
appeared jubilant Thursday at the “unprecedented opportunity” to slash
“Democrat Agencies.” His administration cut $8 billion in green energy projects
— all in states that voted for his 2024 rival, Kamala Harris. Major
infrastructure projects in New York — not only his estranged home state but
also that of Democrats’ top legislative leaders — have been put on ice.
It may be
a bare-knuckle negotiation tactic to pressure recalcitrant Democrats to drop
their demands to restore health care funding. But his detractors see the
shutdown as just the latest stop on Trump’s vengeance tour — which to an
unprecedented degree has used the levers of government to torment the people,
places and institutions that Trump sees as adversaries.
“The
continuing through line is the president is going to use every means in his
power to silence and intimidate his critics,” said Sen. Adam Schiff, a frequent
target of Trump’s ire who denounced the White House’s clean energy freeze as
punishing “political enemies” — a list that has swelled to include late night
comics, universities, the former FBI director, the current New York attorney
general, major Democratic donors, blue-tinted states and, of course, himself.
“This is
an effort to intimidate the whole of society,” Schiff said in an interview.
Trump
supporters say the president is not the first to leverage the government
against political opponents, pointing to the myriad state and federal
investigations he has faced in jurisdictions controlled by Democrats.
A senior
Trump administration official confirmed the infrastructure funding freezes were
a direct response to the shutdown. The White House did not respond to an
inquiry about Trump’s motives.
Democrats
were already queasy at the prospect of Trump capitalizing on a government
shutdown. Explaining his opposition to a shutdown in March, Chuck Schumer, the
Senate Democratic leader, said a funding stalemate would enable Trump and
then-ally Elon Musk to supercharge their effort to slash government
bureaucracy.
This
time, Schumer and his House counterpart Hakeem Jeffries have united behind a
strategy of withholding support to keep the government open unless the GOP
agrees to extend some health care subsidies. But for some Democrats, the
concern still lingers.
A
shutdown “would be the ideal outcome for Project 2025,” Pennsylvania Democratic
Sen. John Fetterman told reporters, pointing to the sprawling conservative
policy blueprint which takes aim at the heart of Democrats’ decades-long policy
gains.
So far,
the most eye-catching shutdown moves are aimed at states that voted against
Trump in the last election — especially the twin bulwarks of blue America, New
York and California.
Just
hours after the shutdown took effect, Russell Vought, the director of the
Office of Management and Budget, announced that money for two New York
infrastructure projects – the Hudson tunnel and the Second Avenue subway — was
put on hold “based on unconstitutional DEI principles.”
The
announcement was swiftly rebuked by New York Gov. Kathy Hochul as “political
payback.” It also got an unenthused reception from Republican Rep. Mike Lawler,
who represents a swing House seat.
It’s a
familiar position for the state and some of its prominent residents, whom Trump
has repeatedly singled out.
“New York
is his home. It’s where he started his businesses, and I think it particularly
irks him that he doesn’t do well politically in New York,” said Rep. George
Latimer, a first-term Democrat from Westchester County.
Trump has
publicly urged U.S. attorneys to prosecute state Attorney General Letitia James
amid mortgage fraud allegations that she’s denied. James’ civil fraud case
against Trump led to a Manhattan trial judge finding last year that the
president and other defendants inflated his net worth and the value of his real
estate properties. Trump was ordered to pay a massive financial penalty in that
case that with interest has reached more than $500 million. He is appealing the
verdict.
The
president has also tried to put his thumb on the scale in the race for New York
City mayor. His Department of Justice moved to dismiss corruption charges
against incumbent Eric Adams this year. Trump allies also discussed a possible
administration post for the mayor in an effort to aid ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo and
complicate the path to victory for democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani. And the
president has floated the possibility of withholding federal funds if Mamdani,
the frontrunner, prevails in the race next month.
“For
Donald Trump the purpose of government isn’t to serve the public, it’s to
attack his opponents,” said Democratic Rep. Ritchie Torres. “Blue states like
New York are front and center. Donald Trump has dethroned Richard Nixon as the
most vindictive president in history.”
One New
Yorker who has been able to stitch together a semblance of a working
relationship with Trump is Hochul. The Democratic governor has met with him
twice to discuss a controversial Manhattan toll program that he vowed last year
to end by rescinding federal approval. So far, the president has kept the toll
in place, but has pressed state officials to approve gas pipeline projects
environmental advocates oppose.
Yet
Hochul has also countered the administration. On Wednesday she won a temporary
court order blocking the federal government from slashing nearly $34 million in
Department of Homeland Security antiterrorism funds to New York City subways.
“I have
no doubt he’s going to do more of this,” Latimer said. “We have a president who
is hostile to our state and our politics. We’re going to have to do our best to
get to the other side of it. But the president has a lot of power and he’s
choosing to use it that way.”
On the
West Coast, California is used to being in Trump’s crosshairs, dating back to
his first term when he baselessly insisted the state was the site of mass voter
fraud.
“Trump
clearly has it in for California. We’re the opposite of his vision of America,”
said Democratic Sen. Alex Padilla, the state’s senior senator.
Trump’s
second go-round in the White House has brought a steady drumbeat of pressure
bearing down on California. He has gutted the state’s climate standards, used
Los Angeles as a marquee testing ground for his immigration crackdown and
domestic deployment of the military and has demanded University of California
Los Angeles pay more than $1 billion to restore federal research funding.
California’s
ruling Democrats have seen these policy moves as hostile acts. But others see a
distinction between Trump’s salvos at the state government and how he views
Californians as a whole.
“We’ve
actually been able to work with the administration to deliver very positive
things for the people of California, and that often means doing what we can to
rein in the government of California,” said Republican Rep. Kevin Kiley, citing
his legislation that revoked California’s ability to ban gas-powered cars.
“That’s a very clear example of how the administration worked with me to
benefit the people of California and stop our state government from harming
them.”
California
is also the geographic heart of Trump’s de facto enemies list, the largest
concentration of individuals and companies that have found themselves at the
receiving end of a furious presidential Truth Social post.
At the
top is its governor, Gavin Newsom, who has eagerly stepped into the role of
chief Trump antagonist with his trollish social media presence and Trump
rage-bait merch. Newsom even took a page out of the president’s playbook
Thursday by threatening state funding to any university that signed a novel
compact floated by the administration to entice schools to adopt the
president’s educational priorities.
“CALIFORNIA
WILL NOT BANKROLL SCHOOLS THAT SELL OUT THEIR STUDENTS, PROFESSORS,
RESEARCHERS, AND SURRENDER ACADEMIC FREEDOM,” Newsom wrote on X, mimicking
Trump’s signature social media style.
Others
called out by Trump have been more circumspect. Last month, Trump singled out
LinkedIn cofounder Reid Hoffman, a prolific Democratic donor and one of Silicon
Valley’s fiercest Trump critics, as a potential target for the Justice
Department to investigate. He had just finished signing a presidential
memorandum to counter “domestic terrorism and organized political violence,”
telling reporters he wanted to crack down on backers of the “left-wing” groups
he believed were behind such acts.
“I hear
names of some pretty rich people that are radical left people,” Trump said.
“Maybe I hear about a guy named Reid Hoffman, somebody’s a pretty rich guy, I
guess.” Hoffman did not immediately comment on the remarks.
Also
mentioned was George Soros, the billionaire investor who has been a fixation
among conservatives for his lavish giving to progressive causes. The
long-running scrutiny did not appear to deter Soros’ group, now run by his son
Alex, from donating $10 million in support of Newsom’s ballot measure to redraw
California’s congressional maps, which the governor has framed as a salvo
against the Trump presidency.
Hoffman,
meanwhile, has not reported any donations to federal campaigns or within
California this year, after going all in on Harris and spending millions of
dollars to oppose Trump.
Harris
has also experienced retribution after her bitterly-fought campaign against
Trump. In August, Trump ended Secret Service protection for the former vice
president, cutting short the extended protection that his predecessor, Joe
Biden, had put into place. The California Highway Patrol has since been
providing protection for Harris as she criss-crosses the nation on her book
tour.
Now, the
federal government shutdown is reverberating through California, most
significantly by imperiling a massive hydrogen hub that aims to replace fossil
fuels — a decision Padilla denounced as “vindictive.” (The impacts of this and
other energy cuts may ripple into dozens of GOP districts across the country.)
“By and
large, during a shutdown, a president seeks to minimize the pain on the
American public. That’s not the case this time,” Padilla said. “Donald Trump,
Russell Vought and Stephen Miller and everybody around him are very intentional
about exploiting the shutdown to make it more painful for people and
constituencies that they deem the enemy. That’s absolutely un-American.”
Blake
Jones and Christine Mui contributed to this report.

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