
Washington, D.C. – October 10, 2025 – With just hours remaining before a critical funding deadline, President Donald Trump doubled down on his threat to veto a bipartisan spending package, plunging the U.S. into the brink of its first government shutdown of his second term. The standoff, centered on demands for deeper cuts to federal agencies and increased border security funding, has already triggered widespread disruptions, including flight delays at major airports and the suspension of non-essential services across the country.
In a fiery address from the Oval Office Thursday evening, Trump lambasted congressional Democrats and “RINO” Republicans for pushing what he called a “bloated disaster of a bill” loaded with “woke giveaways.” “We’re not shutting down the government – the radical left is,” Trump asserted, flanked by House Speaker Mike Johnson and a cadre of conservative lawmakers. The proposed $1.7 trillion measure, which passed the House narrowly on Wednesday, includes funding for disaster relief in hurricane-ravaged Florida and extensions to popular tax credits, but falls short of Trump’s calls for $2 trillion in overall reductions.
Air travelers are feeling the pinch first, with the Federal Aviation Administration warning of staffing shortages at control towers due to furloughs, leading to over 1,500 flight delays reported by major carriers like Delta and United on Thursday alone. At JFK International, frustrated passengers queued for hours amid canceled departures, with one business executive telling CNN, “This is chaos – all because of D.C. gamesmanship.” National parks, including Yellowstone and the Grand Canyon, have begun closing gates to visitors, while Smithsonian museums in the capital dimmed lights for the weekend.
The impasse ties directly into ongoing midterm maneuvering, with Republicans framing the crisis as a win for fiscal hawks ahead of the 2026 elections. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer fired back, accusing Trump of “holding the American people hostage” to appease his MAGA base. Behind closed doors, sources say negotiations have stalled over a provision tying Ukraine aid to stricter immigration enforcement – a flashpoint echoing the Gaza ceasefire’s fragile success earlier this week.
Economists warn of ripple effects: A prolonged shutdown could shave 0.2% off fourth-quarter GDP growth, per Moody’s Analytics, exacerbating inflation pressures from recent tariff hikes on Chinese imports. Wall Street reacted tepidly, with the Dow dipping 150 points in afternoon trading, though energy stocks surged on expectations of delayed environmental regulations.
As midnight approaches, White House aides are scrambling for a last-minute compromise, potentially involving a short-term continuing resolution. But with Trump’s veto pen at the ready, the nation braces for what could be weeks of uncertainty. “This isn’t just about budgets – it’s about who controls America’s future,” said GOP strategist Karl Rove in an op-ed for The Wall Street Journal.
For federal workers facing unpaid leave and families reliant on programs like WIC, the human cost is mounting. “We’re pawns in their power play,” lamented a furloughed IRS employee outside the Capitol.






