Longest Government Shutdown in U.S. History: 35 Days Over Border Wall Funding
Last updated
The shutdown began when Trump refused to sign a continuing resolution that did not include wall funding, after initially indicating he would sign a bipartisan agreement. Approximately 800,000 federal workers went without pay; those deemed 'essential' — including air traffic controllers, TSA agents, Coast Guard personnel, and federal law enforcement — were required to work without compensation. The TSA began calling out sick in significant numbers, raising aviation safety concerns. Trump reopened the government after 35 days without receiving any wall funding.
Overview
Trump shut down the federal government for 35 days — the longest in U.S. history — demanding $5.7 billion for a border wall. He reopened the government 35 days later without receiving the wall funding. The policy goal was not achieved. The shutdown was not a negotiating success.
What it was, for 800,000 federal workers, was a financial crisis.
The Federal Workers
Essential workers were required to show up. Air traffic controllers kept planes in the air. TSA officers screened passengers at airports. Coast Guard personnel maintained maritime operations. Federal law enforcement agents continued their duties. They did this for weeks without receiving paychecks.
Many lived paycheck to paycheck. Food banks near federal facilities reported surges in demand from government workers. Some took second jobs. Some couldn't make rent. None of this was their fault — they were required by law to work, and they were not paid.
The Aviation Safety Warning
The TSA reported dramatic increases in call-outs as the shutdown extended, with sick days taken at roughly twice the normal rate. The National Air Traffic Controllers Association issued public warnings about safety implications of controllers working without pay under financial stress.
The warning was real enough that aviation safety experts took it seriously. The shutdown was creating conditions that degraded the safety infrastructure that millions of passengers relied on daily.
The Outcome
Trump signed a continuing resolution reopening the government without wall funding. The same type of bill he had refused to sign 35 days earlier. Nothing had changed in the legislative arithmetic. The shutdown had accomplished nothing except placing 800,000 federal workers in financial distress and setting a record for the longest government shutdown in American history.
Timeline
Sequence of events
December 19, 2018
Senate passes CR without wall funding
The Senate passes a bipartisan continuing resolution without wall funding; the White House initially indicates Trump will sign it. Conservative media and commentators, including Ann Coulter and Rush Limbaugh, criticize the deal.
December 21, 2018
Trump reverses — refuses to sign
Trump reverses course and says he will not sign a funding bill without wall funding. The House passes an amended bill with $5.7 billion for the wall; the Senate does not pass it.
December 22, 2018
Partial shutdown begins
Funding for approximately 25% of the federal government — nine cabinet departments — lapses. The shutdown begins.
January 11, 2019
Record for longest shutdown broken
The shutdown passes 22 days, exceeding the previous U.S. record set during the Clinton administration in 1995-1996.
January 25, 2019
Trump signs continuing resolution — no wall funding
Trump signs a continuing resolution to reopen the government for three weeks — without any wall funding. He describes it as a compromise while threatening another shutdown. He does not receive the $5.7 billion he had demanded.
Sources
- ↑ Government Shutdown Ends After 35 Days — The New York Times
- ↑ Government shutdown ends as Trump signs deal with no wall funding — The Washington Post
- ↑ 800,000 workers affected — essential workers required to work without pay — The Associated Press
Verification