UPDATED 4:26 P.M.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump and his Democratic opponents appeared to make little progress at a White House meeting aimed at heading off a government shutdown that could disrupt a wide range of services as soon as Wednesday.
Both sides emerged from the meeting saying the other would be at fault if Congress fails to extend government funding beyond a Tuesday midnight deadline (0400 GMT Wednesday).
“I think we’re headed to a shutdown,” Vice President JD Vance said.
Democrats say any agreement to extend that deadline must also preserve expiring health benefits, while Trump’s Republicans insist health and government funding must be dealt with as separate issues.
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said the two sides “have very large differences.”
If Congress does not act, thousands of federal government workers could be furloughed, from NASA to the national parks, and a wide range of services would be disrupted. Federal courts might have to close and grants for small businesses could be delayed.
Budget standoffs have become relatively routine in Washington over the past 15 years and are often resolved at the last minute. But Trump’s willingness to override or ignore spending laws passed by Congress has injected a new dimension of uncertainty.
Trump has refused to spend billions of dollars approved by Congress and is threatening to extend his purge of the federal workforce if Congress allows the government to shut down. Only a handful of agencies have so far published plans detailing how they would proceed in the event of a shutdown.
FIGHT ABOUT SMALL SLICE OF BUDGET
At issue is $1.7 trillion in “discretionary” spending that funds agency operations, which amounts to roughly one-quarter of the government’s total $7 trillion budget. Much of the remainder goes to health and retirement programs and interest payments on the growing $37.5 trillion debt.
Democrats have floated a plan that would extend current funding for seven to 10 days, according to Democratic sources, which could buy time to hammer out a more permanent agreement. That is shorter than the timeline backed by Republicans, which would extend funding to November 21.
Senate Republican Leader John Thune sought to pile pressure on Democrats by scheduling a Tuesday vote on the Republican bill, which has already failed once in the Senate.
There have been 14 partial government shutdowns since 1981, most lasting just a few days. The most recent was also the longest, lasting 35 days in 2018 and 2019 due to a dispute over immigration during Trump’s first term.
This time healthcare is at issue. Roughly 24 million Americans who get coverage through the Affordable Care Act will see their costs rise if Congress does not extend temporary tax breaks due to expire at the end of this year.
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said Congress needs to make those tax breaks permanent now because higher health insurance premiums are being finalized and the new signup period starts November 1.
“We believe that simply accepting the Republican plan to continue to assault and gut healthcare is unacceptable,” Jeffries said at a Monday press conference.
Republicans say they are willing to consider the issue, but not as part of a temporary spending patch.
“They had some ideas that I actually thought were reasonable, and they had some ideas that the president thought was reasonable. What’s not reasonable is to hold those ideas as leverage and to shut down the government,” Vance said.
Democrats want to energize their voting base ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, when control of Congress will be at stake, and have broadly lined up behind the healthcare push.
But Democratic aides have privately expressed concerns that a shutdown could create a public backlash if Democrats do not effectively argue their case and instead come off sounding as just being opposed to whatever Trump wants – a stance Republicans like Thune have derided as “Trump Derangement Syndrome.”
(Reporting by Richard Cowan; additional reporting by David Morgan, Katharine Jackson and James Oliphant; writing by Andy Sullivan; Editing by Scott Malone, Alistair Bell, David Gregorio, Deepa Babington and Richard Chang)
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WASHINGTON (Reuters) -With U.S. government funding due to expire at midnight on Tuesday, Republicans and Democrats in Congress are showing no signs they will agree to a temporary spending fix that would avert a shutdown.
President Donald Trump will convene a meeting with congressional leaders at the White House on Monday in a last-ditch attempt to end the standoff. But Democrats have signaled they are not willing to simply sign off on the short-term funding plan Republicans support without some accommodations.
If Congress does not act, thousands of federal government workers could be furloughed, from NASA to the national parks, and a wide range of services would be disrupted. Federal courts might have to close and grants for small businesses could be delayed.
This is a fight over more than temporary funding, however. It is the continuation of a battle that has been brewing since Trump took office in January and refused to spend billions of dollars that Congress had already approved.
Democrats aim to use the threat of a shutdown to restore some of that funding and shore up healthcare subsidies due to expire at the end of the year.
At stake is $1.7 trillion in “discretionary” spending that funds agency operations, which will lapse at the end of the fiscal year on Tuesday if Congress does not extend it.
That amounts to roughly one-quarter of the government’s total $7 trillion budget, with much of the remainder going to health and retirement programs and interest payments on the $37.5 trillion debt.
The spotlight will be on Trump, a Republican who has blamed Democrats for the impasse, and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, who will have to keep his rank-and-file in line in order to attain his party’s goals.
The Republican-controlled House of Representatives narrowly passed a bill on September 19 to keep government agencies funded through November 21. The Senate, where 60 votes were required to approve the measure, promptly defeated it.
CHRONIC SHUTDOWNS
There have been 14 partial government shutdowns since 1981, most lasting just a few days. The most recent was also the longest, lasting 35 days in 2018 and 2019 due to a dispute over immigration.
This time healthcare is at issue. Roughly 24 million Americans who get coverage through the Affordable Care Act will see their costs rise if Congress does not extend temporary tax breaks that were passed in 2021.
Schumer on Sunday said there will be “huge pressure” on Republicans to agree to talks to restore healthcare cuts, which he said threaten to close rural hospitals and dramatically hike insurance premiums.
“We don’t want a shutdown,” he said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “We hope that they sit down and have a serious negotiation with us.”
Senate Republican Leader John Thune has left the door open to eventually dealing with the healthcare problem, but says Congress must first pass a temporary spending bill to avert a shutdown.
“You can’t do this by Tuesday, and you can’t do it while you’re holding the American people hostage with a government shutdown,” he said on “Meet the Press.”
Some Democratic aides in Congress have suggested lawmakers could back a short funding bill if Republicans agreed to hold votes within the next several weeks on the Affordable Care Act tax credit extension.
But House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries dismissed that idea on Friday, saying Republicans cannot be trusted. “Now, we’re supposed to believe, with a wink and a nod, that Republican leaders are actually interested in dealing with the Affordable Care Act issue?” he said.
DEMOCRATS DIG IN AMID RISKS
Democrats desperately want to energize their voting base ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, when control of Congress will be at stake, and lawmakers from the party’s center as well as its left have lined up behind the effort to boost healthcare spending.
Moderate Democratic Representative Hillary Scholten said her constituents do not want her to support any spending bill that does not shore up healthcare, pointing in particular to children’s cancer research.
But she also said that a shutdown could hurt her Michigan district.
“We’ve got the U.S. Coast Guard, a huge installation,” she said in an interview. “They don’t get paid when the government gets shut down.”
Democratic Representative Joe Courtney of Connecticut said he worried about medical research cuts at Yale University and the University of Connecticut. “It’s devastating to patients who are in clinical trials,” he said.
The strategy comes with risks.
Democratic aides, speaking on condition of anonymity, expressed concerns that a shutdown could create a public backlash if Democrats do not effectively argue their case and instead come off sounding as just being opposed to whatever Trump wants – a stance Republicans like Thune have derided as “Trump Derangement Syndrome.”
“They’re playing with fire, and they know it,” Thune said on Sunday.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan; additional reporting by James Oliphant; editing by Andy Sullivan and Alistair Bell)




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