National Review Online
Tuesday, September 30, 2025
Democrats appear poised to force a government shutdown.
House Republicans have passed a clean bill to continue financing the government
beyond the end of the fiscal year, but Senator Chuck Schumer is digging in his
heels in the upper chamber, where any government financing bill will require
the votes of at least seven Democrats. Current funding runs out at the end of
Tuesday, but a much-publicized meeting with the White House on Monday ended
with Schumer citing “very large differences.”
Ostensibly, Democrats are trying to pressure Republicans
on health care. Joe Biden used Covid-era spending bills as an excuse to expand
Obamacare subsidies to help cover the skyrocketing premiums caused by the
onerous regulations of the national health care law. Those enhanced subsidies
were supposed to be temporary and were set to expire at the end of 2025.
Democrats want them extended. In addition, Democrats are screaming bloody
murder about modest good-government reforms to Medicaid aimed at verifying addresses
of recipients, making sure illegal immigrants don’t get covered, and requiring
able-bodied enrollees to work part-time jobs to receive coverage.
What the shutdown talk is really about, however, is that
Schumer is under heavy pressure from his base to demonstrate that Democrats are
willing to take the fight to Trump, responding to the progressive criticisms
that they are flailing about as Trump imposes his will. They just view health
care spending as the best pretext.
Democrats are confident that they can work with their
allies in the media to blame any shutdown on Republicans, which they have had
success with in the past. But historically, the public has tended to place the
blame on the party that rejects a clean bill and forces a shutdown to make
policy demands on issues that aren’t directly related to disagreements over the
government spending levels. In this case, Democrats aren’t even asking to
restore funding that was cut — they are demanding that Republicans expand a
program they have been opposing for the past 16 years.
Some Democrats are pointing to the 2013 shutdown
resulting from the Republican effort to defund Obamacare for inspiration. At
that time, Republicans were said to have lost the fight politically, but they
still came back in 2014 to take over the Senate, gaining nine seats.
However, the story of 2014 is more a story of the
disastrous rollout of Obamacare, with its failed website, its skyrocketing
premiums, and the fact that millions of individuals lost health insurance plans
that they liked despite Barack Obama’s promises that they would not. The very
real damage caused by Obamacare overwhelmed any sour memories voters had about
the shutdown.
Democrats may turn out to be right in their calculation
that any hit they take from the shutdown would, at worst, be short-lived. And
in the meantime, they can use the conflict to energize their demoralized base
heading into an election year. But there is also a risk that this will backfire
spectacularly.
Given that they will almost certainly have to cave and
agree to fund the government eventually, all their tough talk now will only
reinforce the sense of disillusionment among their base when that moment
inevitably comes.
Additionally, while they are claiming to be frustrated
with Trump’s efforts to eliminate agencies that he doesn’t like, a government
shutdown fight would give him clearer discretionary power. Already, in a savvy
preemptive move by Trump, the White House Office of Management and Budget has
instructed agencies to prepare for mass layoffs of federal workers in the case of
any shutdown.
It’s possible that all the public posturing is just some
brinkmanship that will end with a last-minute deal, if even a short-term
measure that buys more time for negotiations. At this time, however, all signs
are pointing toward Democrats’ being determined to shut down the government.
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