Let Congress Go Home For The Recess, Let Them Hear From The People
Instead of staying in Washington, Congress should go on recess so Members of Congress and Senators can hear from the people how the shutdown is impacting them.
Instead of staying in Washington, Congress should go on recess so Members of Congress and Senators can hear from the people how the shutdown is impacting them.
As the government shutdown continues, Washington is coming to resemble a fight between toddlers. Except the toddlers have the excuse of not knowing any better.
As the shutdown continues the numbers get worse for the President, but he doesn’t seem to care.
As the shutdown drags on, it’s beginning to have an impact on the economy.
After twenty-five days, there’s no end in sight to the Federal Government shutdown. You can thank the President for that.
As the shutdown goes on, the polls are getting worse for the President.
As the government shutdown enters through its twenty-fourth day, attention is shifting to Senate Republicans who could be pressured to break ranks and potentially force a resolution.
If you’re looking for the biggest obstacle to a resolution to the government shutdown, look no further than President Donald J. Trump.
President Trump appears to be backing away from the idea of declaring a national emergency to get his wall built. But the other options he’s considering aren’t much better.
Two years of Republican control of the Legislative and Executive Branches has put us back on a path toward $1 trillion budget deficits.
The government shutdown has now entered historic territory, and the Trump Administration is moving closer to a “national emergency” or other extra-legal means to get money for his wall.
President Trump stormed out of a meeting with Congressional leaders as the shutdown drags on with no end in sight.
New polling clearly indicates that the President is losing the battle for public opinion over the government shutdown.
President Trump’s speech on the border wall and the shutdown was fact-free, misleading, and overall a bomb.
As the shutdown drags on, Republicans are beginning to fear that members in the House and Senate may begin to fall away from supporting the President.
President Trump is offering to change his ‘concrete wall’ with a ‘steel barrier’ in what he apparently things is a compromise.
President Trump is making clear that he doesn’t care how his shutdown is impacting Federal workers.
As the shutdown continues, there’s little sign of progress on either end of Pennsylvania Avenue.
As the shutdown drags on, the President is digging in his heels even further.
As the shutdown drags on, Mitch McConnell finds himself facing pressure from the White House and from members of his own caucus.
In a late first-day session, Congress passed a series of bills designed to reopen most of the government, but they’re already ‘dead on arrival’ in the Senate.
With Democrats set to take control of Congress today, a resolution to the shutdown doesn’t appear to be any closer.
The longer the shutdown goes on, the wider its impact is likely to become.
Democrats have unveiled what appears as if it will be their first effort to end the shutdown, but there are already signs Republicans will reject it.
As 2018 draws to a close, there’s no sign that the government shutdown will end any time soon.
Congress will not be returning to Washington until some time next week. Thus guaranteeing that this shutdown will last at least through January 3rd.
Is it possible that the solution to the government shutdown is letting the President pretend he got funding for his border wall even though he didn’t?
With the economy appearing to sour, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin is quickly becoming the President’s latest target of criticism.
Christmas is behind us, but don’t expect any progress when it comes to the government shutdown, which is in its fifth day.
While it has an admitted populist appeal. the idea of Congressional pay being withheld during a shutdown is a non-starter due to the Constitution.
There was no progress on resolving the government shutdown today, and little hope that anything will happen before late next week.
While the political media is spending a lot of time talking about it, the actual impact of this latest government shutdown is likely to be limited and possibly even unnoticeable to most Americans.
The government entered its third shutdown of the year with little sign of an immediate resolution.
With just hours to go, a partial government shutdown is becoming more and more likely.
Hours before the House was set to vote on a temporary funding bill for the government, President Trump has apparently changed his mind.
The Senate passed a bill that keeps the government funded through the beginning of February, but fails to provide any funding for the President’s border wall.
With three days to go before a government shutdown, there are at least some signs that the President may be backing away from his threats to shut down the government over funding for his border wall.
With the Friday night deadline fast approaching, nobody in Washington seems to know what’s going on.
The Trump Administration appears to think that the Budget Deficit and National Debt aren’t a big deal because we can just grow our way out of the problem. This is highly unlikely to happen.
This month’s budget fight is likely the last chance the President will have to get any funding for his border wall.
Trump has reportedly told aides that he doesn’t really care about reports of an approaching crisis of the budget deficit and national debt because he’ll be out of office before it becomes a problem.
A brewing fight over funding for the President’s border wall could throw a monkey wrench into plans to pass a budget by next Friday.
Republicans passed a tax cut bill in December they hoped would help in the midterm elections. It has turned out to be a big dud.
Nearly two years into Republican control of Washington, the budget deficit is headed back up.
In the past, President Trump has threatened to shut down the government if the doesn’t get what he wants in the budget. The latest budget deal effectively dares him to do it.
The Federal Budget Deficit is set to end the Fiscal Year close to $1 trillion, and to continue growing after that.
A new government report indicates that President Trump’s border wall will cost billions more than initially projected. And Mexico still isn’t going to pay for it.
A powerful political network is distancing itself from the Trump-dominated Republican Party.
President Trump is suggesting he may force a government shutdown over his immigration policies just a month before the midterm elections.