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From the Editors: What was the point of all this?

After more than a month of stubbornness and invective in Washington, some sanity reigns — for now. Senate Democrats finally ended their filibuster and allowed the government to reopen as soon as the House concurs in their changes to the bill.

So what was it all for? What did Democrats get out of the longest federal shutdown in American history? On paper, it looks like not a whole lot. A few tweaks to the funding, and a promise of another vote later. For this, federal workers went without pay for more than 42 days — even those required to still show up for work — and benefits and other federal spending was frozen as appropriated funds ran dry. 

That the Democrats would gain next to nothing for their shutdown was obvious from the beginning, and it’s the reason Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer chose not to pursue this line of action back in March, the last time the appropriations threatened to run out. 

“There is no off-ramp” for a government shutdown, Schumer told New York Times reporter Annie Karni in an interview after the continuing resolution passed in March. “The off-ramp is in the hands of Donald Trump and Elon Musk and DOGE. We could be in a shutdown for six months or nine months.” 

He was right, and it doesn’t take an expert to know why: he didn’t have the votes and he didn’t have the leverage. Democrats have 45 members in the Senate plus two independents who usually vote with them. They can’t pass anything without a few Republicans signing on to it. The same situation prevails in the House. All they could have done then was filibuster the bills and hope that Trump and Republicans could stand the pain of a shutdown longer than they and their constituents could.

Democrats call this “hostage-taking” when it’s the Republicans doing it, but like so many things in our politics, the politicos value interests over ideals.

So what changed since March? Absolutely nothing.

The difference now, though, is that Democratic partisans gave Schumer and others no end of grief over their decision then. They demanded action! “Do something,” they insisted. “Resist!”

Well, this was something. But the messaging was as convoluted as the reasoning. Some initially went Full Resistance like Connecticut’s Senator Chris Murphy, who said “we have no moral obligation to pay the bills for democracy’s destruction,” a stance that suggests he would keep the shutdown going until 2029, at least. Eventually they settled on demanding the extension of a Covid-era relief program due to expire, which provided even more money for Obamacare subsidies to people — a program Republicans had never agreed to and which Democrats at the time had said was only temporary.

What was the endgame here? How did the people urging on the shutdown see this playing out? Did they think the Senate Republicans would cave in and vastly expand Obamacare spending? And then what? The Republican-controlled House would also agree to making a pandemic emergency program permanent? And the President would agree to sign the bill?

None of this was ever going to happen. This was underpants gnome logic from the start. It accomplished no legislative end, only fulfilled the left-wing’s atavistic goal of fighting back. Then as soon as the elections were over, even that rationale withered and the eight most reasonable Democrats in the Senate (including Pennsylvania’s own John Fetterman) put an end to the temper tantrum. 

We deserve a better opposition party.

We can put aside the absurdity of the Democrats wanting to abolish the filibuster last year and then filibustering their hearts out this year — hypocrisy on this question is the coin of the realm in Washington. But dragging the whole government into fiscal quicksand to satisfy their radical supporters’ basest political urges? That’s inexcusable.

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2 thoughts on “From the Editors: What was the point of all this?”

  1. Historical Fact: During a public hearing in September 1975 (Church Committee), CIA Director William Colby confirmed the existence of a weapon known as a “nondiscernible microbionoculator,” a modified Colt M1911 pistol that fired a frozen dart containing saxitoxin, a potent neurotoxin derived from shellfish.

    Yesterday: Senator Fetterman fell due to health issues and not from a “nondiscernible microbionoculator.” Almost certainly.

    What was the Democrats shut down all for: Well, they just won the 2025 elections; handily. So it helped them rally their base; and the Republican party is splintering. This past “shut down” energized their base because they consume far-left propaganda and see themselves as constant victims. Democrats are going to massively win the 2026 elections. The Republicans in PA are in full retreat trying to cling to their offices. Prevent defense loses games.

  2. What was the point? Do not give Trump a win. Plain and simple. At the same time, put on full display the democrat’s undying embrace and attention to illegal aliens instead of American citizens. The shutdown cost American taxpayers $15 BILLION a week, plus pain, suffering and anxiety, plus will shuffle in the new far left squad leadership while neutering Schumer and pushing out Pelosi. In the end, they caved and didn’t achieve a single thing, except exposing just how bad the Obamacare deal is. Regarding the 2025 election, I don’t put much concern in it. Virginia wasn’t any surprise regarding true blue, NJ imported 500,000 democratic voters (somehow) since the last gubernatorial election, and NY was no surprise (given the make-up of that leftist Mecca) and the 2 losers that ran against the commie. I think the result just put in motion the final scene in the original Planet of the Apes movie for NYC. Cali is still Cali and will stay that way until it falls into the Pacific. I think the rest of the country saw what the democrats did and will make them pay for it. Republicans generally don’t show up for non-presidential elections, but I think they will rally for the upcoming 2026 races since it will determine if Trump will be able to advance his agenda. We’ll see.

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