Everybody in Washington hates a shutdown. Until you're pushing for one

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Everybody in Washington hates a shutdown. Until you're pushing for one
Abigail JacksonWashington NewsPaul Ryan
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If you’ve been in Washington long enough, you’ve most likely argued both sides of a government shutdown.

Read full article: New South Side entrepreneurs hub plans first conference, looks to boost local economyRead full article: Parents react as state pressures North East ISD to tighten cellphone ban policy2 hours agoPresident Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office of the White House, Tuesday, Sept.

30, 2025, in Washington. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., attends a news conference about the government shutdown, Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Vice President JD Vance, gestures while speaking with reporters in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House, Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2025, in Washington. Vice President JD Vance, right, and House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., speak to members of the media outside the West Wing at the White House in Washington, Monday, Sept. 29, 2025, in Washington. President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office of the White House, Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025, in Washington. “You have to get people in a room, and you have to just make deals for the good of the country,” Trump remarked., and Trump was then a business mogul who had yet to enter politics. Now that he is president, Trump and his party are taking a strikingly different posture, refusing to negotiate with Democrats in Just last year, Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer was criticizing ideologues who “amazingly believe that causing a shutdown is somehow a good thing, if it gets them what they want.” Now Schumer and most of his fellow Democrats are rejecting bills to open and fund the government because they want If you’ve been in Washington long enough, you’ve most likely argued both sides of a government shutdown. Both parties have used the threat of shutdowns to force a policy outcome, and both sides havefor doing the same. Nobody likes a shutdown, but each side insists that the American people are on their side — whether their side is supporting a shutdown or not. “Everybody just makes the mistake of believing in the righteousness of their positions, and it blinds them to the reality of shutdowns,” said Brendan Buck, who served as a top aide to House Speakers John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Paul Ryan, R-Wis. “It’s a political messaging exercise framed as a negotiating tactic, but there’s very little evidence that it really serves a policymaking purpose. It is more just a platform to talk about what’s important to you.”Few politicians — save the few moderates who always chafe at shutdown maneuvers — are immune. When Vice President JD Vance was a senator last year and Congress, yet again, was on the brink of a funding lapse, he made an assertive case for “Why shouldn’t we be trying to force this government shutdown fight to get something out of it that’s good for the American people?” Vance asked in a September 2024 podcast interview. “Why have a government if it’s not a functioning government?” Vance is taking a much different approach now. Standing with GOP leaders at the White House earlier this week, he said it was “not reasonable” for Democrats to use their proposals “as leverage and to shut down the government unless we give you everything you want.” In 2013, Democratic Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, then in her first term, argued in a floor speech that the “bare minimum that we can do” would be to pass a short-term funding bill “to keep the doors open and the lights on.” Now, Warren has twice voted against a short-term funding bill pushed by GOP lawmakers and the White House. “Democrats are at the negotiating table. We don’t have a long list of demands. We’re not saying we need to find more money,” Warren wrote on the social media site X. “We just want Republicans to restore the health care coverage they took away from millions of Americans.”What changes from each shutdown scenario is what specific policy the instigating party wants out of it. Back in the fall of 2013, Republicans — headed by Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and conservatives in the House — were adamant that any government funding bill needed to strip money fromand led the nation into a 16-day shutdown. In January 2018, it was Democrats who were insisting that any government spending bill offer legal protections to young immigrants known as “Dreamers.” But Trump refused to negotiate, and the shutdown ended after three days. Later in Trump's first term, he demanded money for a border wall that lawmakers would not approve, and Trump said he would “be the one to shut it down” as he sparred with congressional leaders over who would be responsible for the closures. That partial shutdown lasted 35 days.One common theme is that the party forcing the shutdown almost never gets what it wants. The Affordable Care Act was not defunded, Democrats only got a vote onand Trump had to declare a national emergency to get money for his border wall. If past is prologue, that would suggest Democrats this time will not get what they want: an extension of health care subsidies for people who purchase plans through the Affordable Care Act, plus a reversal of Medicaid cuts put in place through the GOP's signature tax law earlier this year. Michael Thorning, who worked for former Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., said he believes shutdowns are happening more often because both Democrats and Republicans have concluded “that the public is not going to punish them at the polls.” “It's hard to see any pattern of public accountability there,” said Thorning, now the director of the structural democracy project at the Bipartisan Policy Center. “I think that has probably reduced the riskiness of what was seen as a pretty hardball tactic.” Asked for comment on Trump’s previous shutdown-related comments, the White House press office did not respond immediately. Their general press line gave an automatic message that due to “resulting from the Democrat Shutdown, the typical 24/7 monitoring of this press inbox may experience delays.” Later, spokeswoman Abigail Jackson responded that “Chuck Schumer and the Democrats are so desperate to distract from their decision to shut down the government that they’re making the AP write stories on their week old Instagram posts." She was referring to a post from Schumer's account that featured Trump's comments from 2013. “Here’s the truth: Democrats shut down the government because they want free health care for illegal aliens and they know it hurts the American people,” Jackson said. “Just listen to their own statements.” Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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Abigail Jackson Washington News Paul Ryan Politics Ted Cruz JD Vance Brendan Buck Charles Schumer Thomas Udall Michael Thorning Donald Trump

 

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