The federal government has been shutdown after Democrats in the Senate refused to back the funding plan passed by House Republicans – and President Donald Trump had a trap set for the tax-and-spend party.
Republicans immediately pointed the finger at Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Democratic leaders, blaming them for the collapse of negotiations. And in the final hours before the shutdown, Trump warned that his administration had a trap: A shutdown would be an opportunity to make “irreversible” cuts to Democrat-protected spending programs.
“We can do things during the shutdown that are irreversible, that are bad for them and irreversible by them, like cutting vast numbers of people out, cutting things that they like, cutting programs that they like,” Trump said.
Now, Republicans can implement these plans to use the shutdown to quickly make spending cuts that Democrats can not easily reverse.
The House earlier passed a “clean” continuing resolution, which did not include health care for illegal immigrants or other demands from Democrats. But Senate Democrats blocked it, insisting that any funding bill must restore expanded health insurance subsidies and reverse recent Medicaid spending reductions.
Schumer fired back in a prerecorded statement posted to X, declaring, “It’s midnight. The Republican shutdown has just begun because Republicans wouldn’t protect America’s healthcare.”
Meanwhile, House Speaker Mike Johnson blamed Democrats for the shutdown, tweeting: “Democrats have officially voted to CLOSE the government. The only question now: How long will Chuck Schumer let this pain go on — for his own selfish reasons?”
One new and controversial element is the Trump administration’s instruction that agencies prepare not simply for furloughs, but for mass firings of federal employees working in nonessential programs not aligned with Trump’s MAGA priorities.
Republicans argue that Schumer and his caucus are holding the country hostage to unpopular demands, forcing cuts to national security and basic functions unless Democrats get their way. Senate Majority Leader John Thune criticized Democrats for wanting to shut down the government as a political tool, and said Schumer sees “it as politically advantageous” to force a crisis.
Trump maintains that Democrats are demanding “free health care for undocumented immigrants” and using that as leverage in the budget fight.
On the Democratic side, Schumer insists Republicans must negotiate in good faith and include the spending priorities Democrats demand. He warns that any “clean” spending bill that ignores those issues is unacceptable.
As the shutdown takes effect, up to 750,000 federal employees may be furloughed, and many government services will halt or scale Essential services such as Social Security, Medicare, and military operations will continue, but programs like WIC and federal support at the state level face funding interruptions.
Republicans make clear their strategy now is to force Democrats to the table under pressure. The “clean” funding bill gives the Senate Democrats a choice: either back it and reopen government, or face a battle over who voters will blame for hardship.
As Trump put it, Democrats have taken “a big risk” by forcing a shutdown – and may have already fallen directly into his trap.
President Trump on Democrats: "We can do things during the shutdown that are irreversible that are bad for them and irreversible by them, like cutting vast numbers of people out, cutting things they that they like, cutting programs that they like." pic.twitter.com/nI7lktc6vy
— CSPAN (@cspan) September 30, 2025