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The United States government could be headed for a shutdown this weekend after two failed attempts by House Republicans in recent days to avert a stoppage.
You are viewing: The US government could be headed for a shutdown. Here’s what that may look like.
First, Speaker Mike Johnson and his colleagues saw one bipartisan deal fall apart amid opposition from Elon Musk and President-elect Donald Trump. Then a second GOP-negotiated deal collapsed due to 38 House Republicans joining nearly all Democrats to vote no and tank that effort.
Johnson and his colleagues worked feverishly throughout Friday to avert a stoppage and announced plans to vote on a third effort in the coming hours with Johnson promising Friday afternoon “we will not have a government shutdown.”
But success is far from assured amid a complex series of disputes on issues from the debt ceiling to various funding priorities at issue ahead of an array of impacts that could be felt across the country, as well as economic impacts that could grow with each passing day.
For now, experts are downplaying the immediate economic effects and noting that lawmakers have intense motivation to find a deal and then get home for the holidays.
“Nobody wants the optics of shutting down the government,” Stifel chief Washington policy strategist Brian Gardner noted in a live Yahoo Finance appearance on Thursday, noting a shutdown would include things like temporarily unpaid military personnel.
But with few options left, what could be a growing economic question for the coming days is the length of any stoppage — especially in the middle of the holiday travel season.
TSA Administrator David Pekoske tried to assuage some concerns Thursday when he noted in a post that about 59,000 of his agency’s over 62,000 employees “are considered essential and would continue working without pay in the event of a shutdown.”
But he was quick to add a warning: “Please be aware that an extended shutdown could mean longer wait times at airports.”
If a shutdown begins to drag out, the bite could begin to be directly felt on Monday morning at the beginning of the workweek.
Many of America’s more than 2 million federal employees (and another 2 million military personnel) could either find themselves furloughed, working without pay, or simply dealing with shutdown-related disruptions.
Read more: How a government shutdown would impact student loans, Social Security, investments, and more
The effects would be felt by individuals but also many businesses that rely on the government on a day-to-day basis.
At the same time, wide swaths of the government are set to be largely unaffected — notably Social Security and Medicare.
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Source link https://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-us-government-could-be-headed-for-a-shutdown-heres-what-that-may-look-like-135245468.html
Source: https://summacumlaude.site
Category: News