Welcome to the shutdown, 2025 edition. On Tuesday evening, the US Senate was unable to pass a spending bill that would have kept the US government funded, and for the first time in nearly seven years, federal operations have been drastically curtailed.
At some point, this shutdown – like all the ones before it - will end. It may take days; it may take weeks, but eventually, as public pressure and political pain grow, one side or the other will yield.
Here are four scenarios for how that might play out:
1. Democrats Quickly Break Ranks
Senate Democrats shot down a Republican spending bill that would have kept the government operating until November, but that vote may have contained the seeds of their defeat.
While forty-four Democrats (and Republican iconoclast Rand Paul) voted no, two Democrats and one Democrat-allied independent sided with the Republican majority. Notably, Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada, facing re-election in a state that's trending Republican, expressed concern about the economic toll of the shutdown.
She is not alone; other Democrats from battleground states could feel similar pressure.
2. Democrats Back Down
Even if the Democrats remain unified, the pressure to abandon the fight will likely increase as the shutdown prolongs. Government employees, a key constituency, will be immediately affected by delayed paychecks.
The public's frustration may lead Democrats to reconsider their position, potentially allowing them to cut their losses and shift focus to other pressing issues.
3. Republicans Make Concessions
Republicans currently feel empowered, but they could miscalculate and find themselves conceding ground. A scenario where they agree to extend health-insurance subsidies could emerge, especially as they consider the long-term electoral implications of the shutdown.
4. The Shutdown Stretches On
If the shutdown continues for an extended period, both sides could suffer political consequences. Past shutdowns have shown that dragging it out typically results in widespread public discontent, with blame likely falling on both parties.
In this scenario, anger from grassroots supporters could reshape upcoming elections, as the populace grows weary of political stalemates.