Why This Government Shutdown Is Different

为何这次政府关门不同

The Journal.

2025-10-02

20 分钟
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Government funding lapsed early Wednesday morning after the White House and lawmakers failed to reach a spending deal, triggering a shutdown that is expected to halt some federal services and put hundreds of thousands of federal workers on furlough.​​ WSJ’s Natalie Andrews takes us inside the contentious dispute and explains why the gulf between Democrats and Republicans is wider than ever. Ryan Knutson hosts.Further Listening: - Inside DOGE's Campaign of Secrecy- DOGE: The Plan to Downsize the GovernmentSign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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  • Lawmakers in Washington often threaten government shutdowns,

  • and it feels like every year they get pretty close.

  • But today, for the first time in six years, it actually happened.

  • We start with the latest on the government shutdown.

  • The U.S. government is now officially shut down.

  • The U.S. government officially shut down at midnight.

  • The Metro was noticeably quieter this morning commuting to work.

  • hundreds of thousands of people in the district likely woke up to furlough notices with the shutdown and it seems like the area is quieter because of it.

  • That's our colleague Natalie Andrews.

  • We've had government shutdowns twice in this century,

  • one in 2019 and one in 2013, but what makes this one different?

  • This one is different primarily

  • because lawmakers are really at a stalemate here in a way that It doesn't seem like there's an easy off-ramp,

  • and that's going to make it hard for any sort of real agreement or breakthrough.

  • And there's one more thing making this shutdown different, a man named Russell Vote.

  • Russ Vote, the head of the OMB, which manages the budget,

  • has asked agencies to look at places where they could reduce the size of the federal government during a shutdown.

  • essentially fire people instead of just put people on furlough.

  • That's never happened.

  • In other words,