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Government shutdown could be longest ever, warns House Speaker Johnson

The Capitol is seen under gray skies on the thirteenth day of the government shutdown, in Washington. 13 Oct. 2025.
The Capitol is seen under gray skies on the thirteenth day of the government shutdown, in Washington. 13 Oct. 2025. Copyright  AP/Scott Applewhite
Copyright AP/Scott Applewhite
By AP with Euronews
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With Congress and the White House in stalemate, some are eyeing the end of the month as the next potential deadline to reopen the government.

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Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson predicted on Monday that the federal government shutdown may become the longest in history, saying he “won't negotiate” with Democrats until they hit pause on their healthcare demands and restore operations.

Standing alone at the Capitol on the 13th day of the shutdown, the speaker said he was unaware of details of thousands of federal workers being fired by the Trump administration.

It's a highly unusual mass layoff widely seen as a way to seize on the shutdown to reduce the scope of government. Vice President JD Vance has warned of “painful” cuts ahead, even as employee unions sue.

“We’re barrelling toward one of the longest shutdowns in American history,” said Johnson.

With no endgame in sight, the shutdown is expected to roll on for the foreseeable future. The closure has halted routine government operations, shuttered Smithsonian museums and other landmark cultural institutions and left airports scrambling with flight disruptions, all injecting more uncertainty into an already precarious economy.

The House is out of legislative session, with Johnson refusing to recall lawmakers back to Washington, while the Senate, closed on Monday for a federal holiday, will return to work on Tuesday. But senators are stuck in a cul-de-sac of failed votes as Democrats refuse to relent on their healthcare demands.

Johnson thanked President Donald Trump for ensuring military personnel are paid this week, which removed one main pressure point that may have pushed the parties to the negotiating table. The Coast Guard is also receiving pay, a senior administration official confirmed on Monday. The official insisted on anonymity to discuss plans that have yet to be formally rolled out.

At its core, the shutdown is a debate over healthcare policy — particularly the Affordable Care Act subsidies that are expiring for millions of Americans who rely on government aid to purchase their own health insurance policies on the Obamacare exchanges. Democrats demand the subsidies be extended, but Republicans argue the issue can be dealt with later.

House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries said with Republicans having essentially shut down the chamber now for a fourth week, no real negotiations are underway. They're “nowhere to be found”, he said on MSNBC.

With Congress and the White House in stalemate, some are eyeing the end of the month as the next potential deadline to reopen the government.

Open enrollment begins on 1 November for the health programme at issue, and Americans will face the prospect of skyrocketing insurance premiums. The Kaiser Family Foundation has estimated that monthly costs would double if Congress fails to renew the subsidy payments that expire on 31 December.

At the end of October, government workers on monthly pay schedules, including thousands of House aides, will go without paychecks.

A persistent issue

The healthcare debate has dogged Congress ever since the Affordable Care Act became law under then-President Barack Obama in 2010.

The country went through a 16-day government shutdown during the Obama presidency when Republicans tried to repeal the Affordable Care Act in 2013.

Trump tried to “repeal and replace” the law, commonly known as Obamacare, during his first term, in 2017, with a Republican majority in the House and Senate. That effort failed when then-Senator John McCain memorably voted thumbs-down on the plan.

With 24 million now enrolled in Obamacare, a record, Johnson said on Monday that Republicans are unlikely to go that route again, noting he still has “PTSD” from that botched moment.

“Can we completely repeal and replace Obamacare? Many of us are sceptical about that now because the roots are so deep,” Johnson said.

The Republican speaker insists his party has been willing to discuss the healthcare issue with Democrats this autumn, before the subsidies expire at the end of the year. But first, he said, Democrats have to agree to reopen the government.

The longest shutdown, during Trump’s first term over his demands for funds to build the US-Mexico border wall, ended in 2019 after 35 days.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration is exercising vast leeway both to fire workers — drawing complaints from fellow Republicans and lawsuits from employee unions — and to determine who is paid.

That means not only military troops but other Trump administration priorities don’t necessarily have to go without pay, thanks to the various other funding sources as well as the billions made available in Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which is now law.

The Pentagon said over the weekend it was able to tap $8 billion (€6.91bn) in unused research and development funds to pay the military personnel. They had risked missed paychecks on Wednesday. But the Education Department is among those being hard hit, disrupting special education, after-school programmes and other schemes.

“The Administration also could decide to use mandatory funding provided in the 2025 reconciliation act or other sources of mandatory funding to continue activities financed by those direct appropriations at various agencies,” according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.

The CBO had cited the departments of Defense, Treasury and Homeland Security and the Office of Management and Budget as among those that received specific funds under the law.

“Some of the funds in DoD’s direct appropriation under the 2025 reconciliation act could be used to pay active-duty personnel during a shutdown, thus reducing the number of excepted workers who would receive delayed compensation,” CBO wrote in a letter responding to questions raised by Joni Ernst, a Republican Senator from Iowa.

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