Shutdown showdown threatens US government pay checks
Millions of Americans braced Monday for pay and welfare checks to stop within days as
Four months after barely avoiding the more serious prospect of a credit default, the world's largest economy is once again on the verge of a convulsion, with the lights due to go out at the weekend.
The party's leadership does not even have the votes to advance a short-term funding bill at 2023 spending levels -- known as a continuing resolution -- to keep the government open past midnight on Saturday.
A shutdown would put at risk the finances of workers at national parks, museums and other sites operating on federal funding, but it could also carry significant political risk for President
"Funding the government is one of the of the most basic, fundamental responsibilities of the
"And if
The Biden adminstration also warned that seven million people who rely on the food aid program for women and children could also see their money stopped.
The funding deadlock arose after
Another major sticking point has been a request for additional aid for
Both parties in the
"UNLESS YOU GET EVERYTHING, SHUT IT DOWN!," former president
- Polarization -
The budget vote in
Trump, who is also running for re-election, forced a 35-day shutdown over border controls in 2018 but ended up reopening the government after failing to secure a single concession from
The impasse is invariably resolved before the standoffs become crises but this year the showdown is exacerbated by new levels of polarization on
In the
A measure that would keep the government open through early December has support on both sides of the
The shutdown prospect comes just four months after
Moody's -- the only major ratings agency to maintain its maximum score for US sovereign debt -- warned that the latest drama could threaten its top tier status.
The US government employs more than two million civilian workers, as well as uniformed military personnel and federal contractors. Civil servants deemed "non-essential" would be asked to stay home during a shutdown, getting paid only on their return.
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