As the
Shutdown Pain Grows, Trump Attends to Other Matters
The
president attended a Halloween party Friday and called attention to the marble
renovation of a White House bathroom.
Zolan
Kanno-Youngs
By Zolan
Kanno-Youngs
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/31/us/politics/trump-shutdown.html
Published
Oct. 31, 2025
Updated
Nov. 1, 2025, 12:07 a.m. ET
American
families are worried about losing food stamp benefits. Hundreds of thousands of
federal government workers have no idea when they will next be paid. Several
airports have been experiencing delays because of staffing shortages.
The pain
of the government shutdown is growing more acute as it grinds toward the
five-week mark, with Congress showing little movement toward a resolution. But
President Trump has been attending to other matters.
Just
hours after returning from a trip across Asia, Mr. Trump left Washington on
Friday for a Halloween party and a fund-raiser at his Florida residence. When
he weighed in briefly on the shutdown, it was to cast the potential loss of
benefits that millions of Americans rely on for groceries as mostly a problem
for Democratic voters. Rather than offer steps he might take to bring the
crisis to a close, Mr. Trump called attention to the new details of his
renovation of a White House bathroom.
“Highly
polished, Statuary marble!” Mr. Trump declared on social media as he posted
images of his new Lincoln bathroom, even as some households planned on handing
out canned soup in lieu of candy.
The stark
contrast crystallized how the president has appeared largely disconnected from
the fiscal impasse that has gripped Washington and paralyzed much of the
federal government.
In the
weeks before the shutdown, Mr. Trump expressed confidence about the looming
fight with Democrats. He said that he was certain Republicans could fund the
government solely with their own votes and that they should not “even bother”
negotiating with the other party.
As the
stalemate nears the record for the longest shutdown in U.S. history — one set
during Mr. Trump’s first term — he has continued to seem unbothered by the
fallout, casting the log jam as one easily resolved.
“It’s
their fault,” Mr. Trump said of Democrats as he traveled to Mar-a-Lago, his
Florida club and estate, on Friday. “Everything is their fault. It’s so easily
solved.”
“We’d
like to see this taken care of rapidly,” Mr. Trump said, adding: “We have
tremendous support, but it’s not even support, it’s common sense. Open up the
country.”
The
shutdown hinges on a fight in Congress over a short-term funding measure.
Republicans want to pass one at current budget levels, while Democrats want to
include additional money for health care programs and language that would limit
Mr. Trump’s power to freeze funding.
Administration
officials have expressed confidence that the public will blame Democrats for
the standoff. But new polling this week found that more Americans blame Mr.
Trump and Republicans. Among registered voters, 46 percent blamed Republicans
while 37 percent blamed Democrats, according to a Washington Post-ABC
News-Ipsos poll.
Mr. Trump
offered one suggestion Thursday evening about how to get the government funded
again, renewing his call to eliminate the filibuster to force through
legislation that would end the shutdown. But his own party members who control
the Senate have made clear they do not support such a measure, fearful that it
would allow Democrats to pass a slew of liberal legislation if they retook the
majority.
Instead,
Republicans in Congress are beginning to call on Mr. Trump to get more involved
in negotiating a compromise.
“He’s the
leader of the band,” Senator Jim Justice, Republican of West Virginia, told
reporters last week on Capitol Hill. “And we’re to the point in time now where
we have an 18-karat food fight going on. So at some point in time, the leader
of the band is going to step up and guide us.”
The White
House declined to answer questions about whether Mr. Trump would get more
involved in the negotiations in the days ahead and what steps he would take to
try to end the shutdown while at Mar-a-Lago over the weekend.
A White
House spokeswoman, Abigail Jackson, said in a statement that Democrats needed
to provide Republicans the votes to fund the government before any negotiations
over their health care demands could begin.
“We will
only have policy conversations once Democrats stop holding the American people
hostage and reopen the government,” Ms. Jackson said.
But so
far, Democrats have held firm, even as some labor unions representing federal
workers have urged Congress to back the G.O.P. spending bill.
“You
thought there would be enough division or cracks or pressure points that this
would end, but it’s been remarkable that they’ve held solid,” said Matthew
Bartlett, a Republican strategist.
“I think
very unfortunately both parties are seeing pain and seeing polling, but they
think it’s the other party that is hurting and not recognizing that it is the
American public,” he added.
Republicans
have argued that the unwillingness of Democrats to support current spending
levels is leading to the potential loss of food stamp benefits for 42 million
Americans.
However,
Democrats have sought to put the blame on the G.O.P. for any disruption of
benefits as the administration has refused to tap emergency funds to finance
the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, even as the White House
has used unorthodox maneuvers to ensure that members of the military and law
enforcement get paid.
A federal
judge on Friday afternoon ordered the Trump administration to continue paying
the benefits, but it remained unclear when the aid would reach American
households.
In a
statement on social media, Mr. Trump said his “Government lawyers” did not
think the administration could legally fund the program, adding that they were
seeking clarity from the courts. He warned that any food stamp benefits paid in
November would “unfortunately be delayed.”
In the
early days of the shutdown, congressional Republicans had been privately cagey
about the prospect of Mr. Trump negotiating directly with Democratic leaders,
wanting to ensure he would not make any high-profile commitments that could
disadvantage his party.
After Mr.
Trump declared that he was willing to make “the right deal” with Democrats on
health care, undermining Republicans’ stated position that they would not
negotiate until the government reopened, he had to back away from the comments.
But
Republicans concede that Mr. Trump will need to negotiate and ultimately
support any measure to end the shutdown.
Senator
Josh Hawley, Republican of Missouri, said last week that he thought it was time
for Democrats to negotiate with Mr. Trump directly.
“They
ought to take him a proposal and make him an offer and say, ‘Here’s what we
want,’” Mr. Hawley said. “He’ll presumably say, ‘Well, I can’t do that, but I
can do this.’ It’s how negotiation works.”
Mr. Trump
has said he is open to speaking with Democratic leaders about health care, but
only after they help fund the government.
“People
don’t get good health care and their premiums go up every single year. So we
should change it,” Mr. Trump told reporters on Friday, before pivoting to his
plans for the evening. “Tonight, we have a big celebration of Halloween, and
I’ll see you later.”
Catie
Edmondson contributed reporting.
Zolan
Kanno-Youngs is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President
Trump and his administration.


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