WASHINGTON — The federal government officially shut down at midnight after the Senate failed to pass a stopgap funding measure, ending days of last-ditch talks and ushering in the first shutdown since 2018–19. Lawmakers from both parties left the Capitol early Sunday with no agreement and little clarity on how long the funding lapse will last.
Republican leaders insist Democrats should allow a seven-week extension that maintains current spending levels. Democrats say they won’t supply the votes without concessions, arguing a straight extension rewards brinkmanship and delays broader budget negotiations. Each side has publicly insisted the other will bear the blame.
GOP leaders plan to force another vote on the same proposal Monday morning and, if necessary, in repeated daily attempts to pressure Democrats into backing the measure. Privately, senators in both parties described deep uncertainty about the duration of a shutdown that could stretch days—or longer—if neither side budges.
The immediate fallout is sweeping. Hundreds of thousands of federal workers will be furloughed, barred by the Antideficiency Act from performing most duties until funding resumes. Many others deemed “excepted” for public safety and national security must report to work without pay, with back pay provided once the government reopens under a 2019 statute. Employees funded outside annual appropriations—such as certain mandatory programs—continue to receive paychecks.
Core safety functions continue, including air traffic control, federal law enforcement, national security operations, and disaster response. Social Security and Medicare benefits continue because they are not subject to annual appropriations, though customer service may slow. Passport and visa services, national parks, small-business lending, research grants, and a range of inspections and civil regulatory work face delays, curtailed hours, or closures depending on available fee balances and agency shutdown plans.
The political stakes are high. Prolonged funding lapses typically depress near-term economic activity, disrupt federal contracting, delay data releases, and dent public confidence—even if some lost output is later recouped when back pay is issued. For now, leaders are testing whether pressure from constituents, federal workers, and business groups will push negotiators toward a short-term continuing resolution or a broader agreement on full-year spending.
What to watch next: Monday’s Senate vote on the GOP stopgap; whether House and Senate leaders open talks on a modified CR; and agency-by-agency contingency moves as the shutdown ripples across services this week.

















