Why a government shutdown looms as Congress splits town

The congress has disappeared, without any plan to avoid an imminent government closure.
The room and the Senate went to a one -week break on Friday with the clock at midnight on September 30, when the funds are exhausted for the federal government.
Before leaving the city, the House Republicans adopted a continuous resolution to keep the government open to current spending levels for seven weeks, until Thanksgiving. All the Republicans of the House except two supported the bill; All the Democrats in the House except one opposed it.
Why we wrote this
Financing The government is ultimately an essential priority for the congress. It is also an opportunity for minority democrats to seek a lever effect. Their base pushes them to take a stand against President Trump.
Shortly after, the Senate voted on this measure and another bill proposed by Democrats who had a number of their health policy priorities. The two did not succeed.
This leaves the Senate with only two days of work to avoid a closure upon its return.
The draft laws on the financing of the government are among the few essential measures which require votes of both parties. Normally, a continuous resolution of seven weeks would be a standard practice for Congress, which excels in kicking the box and often makes difficult and longer term decisions than when it is threatened to miss your holidays – which is why it has established the new pre -Thanksgiving deadline. And the best Democrats and Republicans of the Chamber and Senate Credit Committees continued to work together to try to conclude a longer -term agreement on critical government funds. The leaders of the two parties offer short-term competing extensions to finance the federal government for the next year and to avoid generalized disruptions in government work, as well as to pay federal employees and entrepreneurs in the United States, while they conclude these agreements.
But two factors considerably increase the probability of a closure this time: the refusal of the Trump administration to spend money appropriate by the congress and increased pressure from the Democrats so that their leaders react.
First, since his return to office, President Donald Trump and his administration have repeatedly refused to spend money legally approved by the Congress, unprecedented movements that have essentially seized the power of the congress bag, the government wing which was constitutionally invested with this power.
The Republicans of Congress voted to approve these cuts, known as residences, months after the fact, making them stick. But just before the members of the Congress returned to Washington to settle a fight by funding from the government this month, the director of the management and budget office, Russell Vought, announced that the administration would not spend almost $ 5 billion in foreign aid authorized by the Congress. He said that as he is close to the end of the financial year, the administration can make a “pocket termination” and reduce expenses without the congress having his say.
Pocket attributions are illegal, according to the non -partisan government’s responsibility office. This point of view is shared by the Republican senator Susan Collins of Maine, the moderate president of the Senate credits committee, who castigated Mr. Vought for this decision. A number of his more conservative GOP colleagues have also expressed their frustration, but there is nothing in the continuous resolution of the Republicans who would make the Trump administration to make future attributions.
Democrats say that this has made almost impossible to trust any agreement offered by Republicans.
“Donald Trump and his little servant Russell Vought made fun of the Congress credits process. He trampled on the power of the handbag,” said the minority of the Democratic Senate, Chuck Schumer, in a Friday speech in the Senate. “Why adopt a budget if Russell Vought can cancel it unilaterally?”
President Trump does not seem concerned about the repercussions of a closure.
“The elections have consequences, so we will continue to speak to the Democrats, but I think you could very well end up with a closed country for a while,” he said on Friday afternoon.
The second reason why a closure is more likely than in a past time is simply political. Mr. Schumer and the Democrats feel immense pressure from their base to do something, anything, to do control over President Trump.
When he was asked what his democratic voters told him that they wanted in this bill, the centrist democratic representative Scott Peters of California joked: “You mean, apart from blood?”
“There is a lot of concerns about what the president is doing at the moment, and that the congress must assert itself. And I hope we are going to be part of the CR [continuing resolution] process, “he continued.
Mr. Schumer took the warmth of the democratic base for folding in March and persuade enough of his colleagues to vote with the Republicans for an extension of six months of funding from the government. This has led to calls for its withdrawal from leadership from a number of liberal groups and the fury of its voters.
At the time, Mr. Schumer and the handful of Democrats in the Senate who slowed down with him argued that a government closure would not do much to put pressure on President Trump to stop his wide federal government. They also warned that this could really allow Trump to do more damage because it is the president who decides which parts of the government are essential and must therefore continue to work. This argument can still contain water now.
But most of the Senate Democrats who have slowed down with Mr. Schumer the last time seem very different now.
Illinois Democratic Senator Dick Durbin said that cancellations and other measures to reduce government funds had “changed the landscape” for him since he voted with Mr. Schumer and the Republicans in March.
The district of Maryland democratic rep. Jamie Raskin is just outside Washington and has more federal workers than almost all the others.
“I have been constantly meeting with government employees since the start of this nightmare in January, and they were unjustly dismissed and without ceremony, licensed. They want this reign of terror to end, and therefore we do everything in our power to get there,” he said.
But when he was asked if he thought that a stop could worsen things by stopping their pay checks while doing nothing to stop the actions of the Trump administration, he dodged.
“This is what a negotiation is,” he replied.
Democrats put pressure on health care changes
Democrat’s specific policy requests are a little simpler and easier to resolve than their concern than any agreement will simply be ignored by President Trump. The Democrats presented a bill Wednesday for an extension of one month of public spending which would permanently extend the subsidies to the Act respecting affordable care, called “Obamacare”, which will have to expire at the end of the year. It would also reverse major cups in Medicaid which were included in the “One Big Beautiful Bill” of the GOP which was adopted earlier this year.
Mr. Schumer called him “closure of Trump’s health care” during his Friday speech when he was heading for the Republicans for refusing to negotiate.
The Republicans clearly indicated that the democratic proposal for major concessions in exchange for an extension of one month was a non-start.
“If they were going to extort us for major elements of health policy whenever we were going to make a seven -week stop, I don’t think it would work very well,” said the Republican representative of the southern Dakota. Dusty Johnson.
Johnson said that the confrontation occurred due to internal democratic policy.
“Chuck Schumer needs to seem a hard guy at his base. They think he was rolled in March. He must be angry and fight. … And I think that means the closure of Schumer,” he said.
Historically, the party which obliges a closure of the government on political demands is generally the one that is blamed for this closure – and it generally draws nothing substantial. The survey numbers of the Republicans of the Chamber plunged in 2013 when they closed the government to force a repeal of Obamacare, the short-term closure of the Democrats in early 2018 delivered Zero, and Mr. Trump took the blame when he closed the government at the end of 2018 and in early 2019 to try to force the Congress to finance a wall along the American-mexic border. Despite the survey numbers in each case, there is little evidence that it actually harmed the part which forced the closure in one of the following elections.
There is a certain bipartite support to extend the subsidies to low -income persons who are on Obamacare – subsidies from the start of the COVVI -19 pandemic of 2020. Insurance rates should jump at the end of this year, and many families could face monthly bonuses increases from $ 300 to $ 500 if subsidies expire.
The moderate republican senator from Alaska Lisa Murkowski, one of the two GOP senators who voted against the continuous resolution of her party, presented a distinct bill on Friday to extend these subsidies.
Even if the Republicans accept money for health care premiums, it is not clear if that alone could be sufficient to avoid closing. But for the moment, the Democrats seem eager to prove to their base that they will not give in as they did six months ago, while the Republicans see no reason to negotiate political riders in this short -term bill. If none of the flashes flashes, the government stops in 10 days.

