US
government shuts down after Democrats refuse to back Republican funding plan
First
shutdown in nearly seven years as Republicans accused of ‘risking America’s
healthcare’ in spending bill
Chris
Stein in Washington
Wed 1 Oct
2025 00.00 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/oct/01/us-government-shuts-down
The US
government shut down on Wednesday, after congressional Democrats refused to
support a Republican plan to extend funding for federal departments unless they
won a series of concessions centered on healthcare.
The GOP,
which controls the Senate and the House of Representatives, repudiated their
demands, setting off a legislative scramble that lasted into the hours before
funding lapsed at midnight, when the Senate failed to advance both parties’
bills to keep funding going.
The
shutdown is the first since a 35-day closure that began in December 2018 and
extended into the new year, during Trump’s first term. It comes as Democrats
look to regain their footing with voters, who re-elected Trump last year and
relegated them to the minority in both chambers of Congress.
“Republicans
are plunging America into a shutdown, rejecting bipartisan talks, pushing a
partisan bill and risking America’s healthcare,” top Senate Democrat Chuck
Schumer said on Tuesday evening, as it became clear a shutdown was inevitable.
Last
month, House Republicans passed a bill that would fund the government through
21 November, but it requires the support of some Democrats to clear the 60-vote
threshold for advancement in the Senate. It failed to gain that support in
votes held late on Tuesday, while Republicans also blocked a Democratic
proposal to continue funding through October while also making an array of
policy changes.
“Far-left
interest groups and far-left Democrat members wanted to show down with the
president, and so Senate Democrats have sacrificed the American people to
Democrats’ partisan interests,” Senate majority leader John Thune said.
Senate
Republicans have scheduled another round of votes on the two funding bills on
Wednesday morning, with the stated goal of giving Democrats an opportunity to
change their minds.
The White
House has responded to the shutdown threat by announcing plans to fire federal
workers en masse if funding lapses. “When you shut it down, you have to do
layoffs, so we’d be laying off a lot of people,” Donald Trump said earlier on
Tuesday, adding: “They’re going to be Democrats.”
Shortly
after the failed votes, Russ Vought, director of the White House office of
management and budget, released a letter blaming “Democrats’ insane policy
demands” for a shutdown. “It is unclear how long Democrats will maintain their
untenable posture, making the duration of the shutdown difficult to predict,”
Vought wrote in the letter, which was addressed to the heads of federal offices
and agencies.
Democrats
have demanded an extension of premium tax credits for ACA plans, which expire
at the end of the year. They also want to undo Republican cuts to Medicaid and
public media outlets, while preventing Trump’s use of a “pocket rescission” to
further gut foreign aid.
The total
cost of those provisions is expected to hit $1tn, while about 10 million people
are set to lose healthcare due to the Medicaid cuts, as well as to changes to
the ACA. Without an extension of the tax credits for premiums, health insurance
prices will rise for around 20 million people.
While
Thune has said he would be willing to negotiate over extending the ACA credits,
he insists new government funding be approved first.
Democratic
leaders say they are not backing down, but signs have emerged of dissent within
their ranks. Three members of the Democratic caucus voted for the Republican
proposal on Tuesday evening – two more than when the bill was first considered
earlier this month.
“The
cracks in the Democrats are already showing,” Senate Republican whip John
Barrasso said.
Democrats
who broke with their party indicated they did so out of concern for what the
Trump administration might do when the government shuts down. Federal law gives
agencies and departments some leeway in determining which operations continue
when funding lapses.
“I cannot
support a costly shutdown that would hurt Nevada families and hand even more
power to this reckless administration,” said Democratic senator Catherine
Cortez Masto.
Angus
King, a Maine independent who caucuses with the Democrats, called the vote “one
of the most difficult” of his Senate career, but said: “The paradox is by
shutting the government we’re actually giving Donald Trump more power, and that
was why I voted yes.”
Pennsylvania’s
John Fetterman, the sole Democrat to vote for the Republican funding bill when
it was first considered a week and a half ago, supported it once again, saying:
“My vote was for our country over my party. Together, we must find a better way
forward.”
While the
party that instigates a shutdown has historically failed to achieve their
goals, polls have given mixed verdicts on how the public views the Democrats’
tactics.
A New
York Times/Siena poll taken last week found that only 27% of respondents said
the Democrats should shut down the government, while 65% thought they should
not. Among Democrats, the split was 47% in favor of a shutdown and 43% against,
while 59% of independents were opposed to a shutdown.
A Marist
poll released on Tuesday found that 38% of voters would blame congressional
Republicans for a shutdown, 27% would blame the Democrats and 31% would point a
finger at both parties.
Republican
senator Ted Cruz – an architect of a 2013 shutdown intended to defund the ACA –
described Democrats’s shutdown threat as a “temper tantrum” that would go
nowhere.
“They’re
trying to show … that they hate Trump,” Cruz told reporters. “It will end
inevitably in capitulation. At some point they’re going to turn the lights on
again, but first they have to rage into the night.”

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