With the September 30th deadline barreling down on Washington, the federal government is once again on the brink of a shutdown.
But this is not a typical budget squabble over dollars and cents. It is a high-stakes constitutional showdown that has taken the nation’s public health system hostage.
At the heart of the conflict are two diametrically opposed visions of government, pitting the President’s power to control spending against Congress’s power to fund the nation’s priorities. The outcome will determine not just whether the government stays open, but who wins a raw and revealing battle over the separation of powers.
Discussion
We need less debt not more. We need a balanced budget. The Dems are just wanting to spend money we do not have. I see no positive in their demands.
Democrat's typical hypocrites
Democrats are nothing more than control freak power hungry lunatics. If the American people give into their demands the United States will be a third world country.
Why don't we hold back members' of Congress paychecks. It's they who cannot agree on solution. It's not our fault. It's theirs.
And no more raises for Congress's. And review their benefits and see what can be cut.
Typical Dems, holding the gov hostage for their fancy pet projects! Trumpβs trying to save us from wasteful spending but they just want to hand out money like candy. Time to drain the swamp and let Trump do his job without these crooks always in the way! MAGA!
No we shouldn't agree to their demands, they are forever against President Trumps ideas! πΊπ²
We don't need the rest of the year funded anyhow as government officials take off a lot; they may as well not be there a lot of the time and they will get their back pay once the government starts up again. They already get paid a whole lot of money.
Let the government shut down. They aren't there half the time anyhow and they get a lot of money for what they do or dont' do.
Defund Planned Parenthood
Democrats care more about power than Americans' health, classic fake news spin!
Illegal immigrants are already not entitled to access to Federal Health Care, even though they are required to pay into this program. This is a red herring. Democrats simply want the ACA funded to provide all our citizens their right to healthcare.
Congress works for free, just as the original congress did, do there jobs and then go back to their homes and get it job
Where is the respect for our Constitution and the balance of powers nowadays? π€
Unfortunately, the National Parks are shut down as well. This is wrong; those parks belong to the American People, the Park Rangers should not be involved-thatβs just another way the democrats hurt the people.
Let's cut Congress paychecks in half and if they are not in session they should not get payed.
Take the illegal immigrants off medical and that goes for the somalians to because they are taking over America people jobs
When Democrats are in power, they do not cooperate with the Republicans on bills. Why should the Republicans give in to the Democrats now? I am tired of working my butt off at 72 and paying over $300 a month for my health care while my taxes go to pay for illegals health care. There is something wrong with this picture. I can't go to Mexico for free health care.
If the Democrats think we should supply healthcare coverage to illegal immigrants, send them back if they are here illegally and that would save us plenty of money, as the immigrant problem was started by of course the Biden administration!!!
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The Shutdown Standoff
- What’s Happening: The U.S. government will shut down at midnight on September 30 if Congress does not pass a new spending bill.
- The Holdup: Democrats are refusing to vote for any funding bill unless the Trump administration agrees to release billions of dollars in frozen public health funds.
- The Republican Position: The White House argues the funds were frozen as part of its executive authority to cut wasteful spending and that Democrats are “holding the government hostage” to protect their pet projects.
- The Constitutional Issue: A classic Separation of Powers battle over the “power of the purse,” testing the limits of the President’s authority to refuse to spend money that Congress has already appropriated.

The Shutdown Clock is Ticking
With only a handful of days left, the math in Congress is brutal. The Republican majority in the House is razor-thin, and in the Senate, any funding bill needs 60 votes to overcome a Democratic filibuster. This gives Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer immense leverage.
A government shutdown would have politically damaging consequences for Republicans, who control both Congress and the White House and would likely bear the blame. This reality is the source of the Democrats’ power in this negotiation.
What Exactly Democrats Demand
The Democratic position is not a request for new spending. It is a demand that the President spend money that Congress has already approved by law. Their two core demands are focused on public health:
First, they are demanding the administration unfreeze several billion dollars in appropriated funds for the National Institutes of Health (NIH). This isn’t an abstract pot of money;
it’s the funding that fuels thousands of research grants across the country for everything from finding a cure for Alzheimer’s to developing new cancer treatments.
Second, they are demanding the restoration of funding for critical international health programs, most notably the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). This is a globally celebrated, bipartisan program created by President George W. Bush that has been credited with saving millions of lives in Africa.
The administration has frozen these funds as part of its broader push to cut foreign aid.

The Republican Counter-Argument
The Trump administration and its Republican allies in Congress see the situation very differently. Their argument is rooted in fiscal responsibility and a belief that the President has the authority – and the duty – to rein in what they see as a bloated and wasteful federal budget.
They contend that the NIH and foreign aid funds were frozen as part of the President’s legitimate executive power to manage the government and eliminate spending he deems unnecessary. They see the Democratic demands not as a defense of existing law, but as an act of “political extortion.”

The White House is betting that the public will see a vote against a funding bill as the Democrats’ fault, arguing that they are willing to shut down the entire government to protect a few of their favored programs.
“Republicans see this as a fight over fiscal discipline. Democrats see it as a fight over the rule of law and the integrity of the appropriations process.”

The Constitutional Battleground: The Power of the Purse
This entire standoff is a modern replay of one of the most fundamental conflicts in American constitutional history: the fight over the “power of the purse.”
Article I of the Constitution gives Congress the sole and exclusive power to raise and spend money. Democrats argue that this power is meaningless if a President can simply refuse to spend the money that Congress has legally appropriated.
The President’s action – refusing to spend congressionally approved funds – is a practice known as “impoundment.” This became a major constitutional crisis under President Richard Nixon, who used it to effectively veto parts of laws he disliked.
In response, a Democratic-controlled Congress passed the Impoundment Control Act of 1974, which severely limited the President’s ability to do this. The current administration is now testing the limits of that 50-year-old law.
“This is a direct constitutional challenge. Congress says ‘spend this money.’ The President says ‘no.’ The looming shutdown is the collateral damage of that fundamental conflict over who truly controls the nation’s finances.”
A Government on the Brink
The fight over these specific health programs has become a proxy for a much larger war over the role of government and the balance of power in Washington.
The clock is ticking toward a shutdown that would furlough hundreds of thousands of federal workers and disrupt services for millions of Americans.
But for the leaders in this fight, the stakes are even higher. This is a battle to determine whether the President’s executive authority can override the direct spending commands of the legislative branch – a constitutional question with consequences that will last long after the lights in Washington are turned back on.
If you would end coverage on everyone not entitled to government health care there would be no need to increase funding for health care