Government Shutdowns Are an Example of Congress Doing Its Job
Refusing to fund the government is the primary way minority party lawmakers can check the excesses of the executive branch and the majority party.

When the government shut down for a few weeks in October 2013, then-President Barack Obama made sure to blame conservative Republicans for refusing to pass any short-term spending bill that included Obamacare insurance subsidies.
"The only thing preventing people from going back to work and basic research starting back up, and farmers and small business owners getting their loan…is that Speaker John Boehner won't even let the bill get a yes-or-no vote, because he doesn't want to anger the extremists in his party," said Obama in a mid-shutdown speech.
Today, it's Democrats who are refusing to vote for short-term funding bills to reopen the government so long as they don't include an extension of enhanced Obamacare insurance subsidies that are set to expire at the end of 2025.
Now, President Donald Trump's White House is accusing radical Democrats of inflicting misery and dysfunction on the country.
The shutdown instigated by "Radical Left lunatics" will cause "critical food assistance for low‑income women, infants, and children [to] lapse. Americans will experience travel delays and disruptions to Social Security services," reads a White House email sent out this afternoon.
The consistent rhetoric around government shutdowns, even if the parties and issues are reversed, betrays a common view of Congress' role in our constitutional design: Lawmakers should shut up and fund the government. When they don't do that, and the government shuts down, they've failed to do their job.
This view couldn't be more backwards about how our constitutional scheme, with its separate branches, divided powers, and limits on the power of the executive and majority parties, is supposed to work.
The whole reason for Congress having the power of the purse and holding regular votes on how much money to give the president to spend is to give it the opportunity to say no sometimes.
Congress exercising its power to say no to funding requests and shutting down the government is an example of it doing its job, not an example of it failing to do its job.
There's obviously a functional purpose served by Congress periodically voting on government spending. This creates regular opportunities for lawmakers to evaluate the performance of programs and propose to reform, expand, or abolish them.
More importantly, there's a political and constitutional purpose served by regular appropriations votes. It gives the Congress leverage to discipline an executive branch that might be behaving lawlessly or abusing the constitutional rights of Americans.
The Senate's filibuster likewise gives the minority party the ability to check the power of the majority party in Congress from rubber stamping executive abuses when they control both Congress and the White House.
Not a day goes by that a leading Democrat does not accuse Trump of acting in a lawless and authoritarian manner, whether because of Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids, National Guard deployments, intimidation of broadcast media companies, or more.
There's a lot of merit to Democrats' complaints on those fronts. If they take their own rhetoric seriously, they should be refusing to fund the government, absent some credible concessions from the White House.
Doing otherwise would be at best a tacit admission that they don't believe their own rhetoric. At worst, it would be a dereliction of duty.
To be sure, not every government shutdown is initiated for wise or worthwhile reasons.
Democratic demands in the run-up to this shutdown were notably not about the Trump administration backing off its most authoritarian initiatives. Instead, they're about demanding that "temporary" health insurance subsidies be automatically extended.
The relatively low stakes of that ask, and the fact that a lot of Republicans are eager to extend those subsidies as well, means that this government shutdown will likely be a short one. Because it's not aimed at the most destructive Trump administration policies, it'll be a relatively unproductive shutdown as well.
Still, the fact that the shutdown occurred at all is an increasingly rare example of Congress managing to fulfill its constitutional role of checking the executive. It's not an example of it failing to do its job.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Libertarians for extending Obamacare!
Emergency spending must be maintained. We can't let a crisis go to waste.
Yikes!
"This view couldn't be more backwards about how our constitutional scheme, with its separate branches, divided powers, and limits on the power of the executive and majority parties, is supposed to work."
What a terrible take, Britches.
You have attributed a false choice to the people you are trying to criticize: Congress should shut down government OR fund it without complaint.
Obviously, the third choice is for congress to NOT write blank checks and NOT shut down the government. That, of course, would require congress to operate in a functional manner, compromising on an ethical government that operates within the tolerances of the Constitution. People criticizing congress are criticizing it for its inability to do this, not for refusing to cram through blank checks.
Maybe get out and talk to the people you think you are criticizing?
THIS ^^^ !
You’re forgetting the most important thing. Right and wrong are determined by who, not what. Which means this government shut down is terrible and evil. If the parties were reversed it would be wonderful and good. Principals, not principles.
The what is Obamacare. It needs to completely go away and never return.
This describes your lack of principles to an exacting degree.
Pretty sure the actual libertarian commentariat here is happy for shutdowns regardless of the who. Can't say the same for 90% of the Reason staff or the 4 or so fifty-centers.
Except the minority in this case appears to be throwing this hissy fit in favor of preserving the excesses of pandemic emergency spending.
It's a bonkers take. The democrats want to spend a bunch more money and he cheers them on because they're the minority? They're protesting less spending, including on illegal immigrants. This should be outside of what libertarians consider legitimite legislative deliberations.
They just want more 1.5T in spending. Which reason wants so they can blame Trump.
Except - The Minority wants to fund an excess of $1.4Trillion for healthcare for illegal aliens. And Obamacare subsidies for those making 400% of the poverty level. And restore funding to Corp for Public Broadcasting. The Majority is for all that tyrannical fiscal responsibility.
This fvckin rag gets to be more of a clown show every single day
These democrat scumbags will get nothing and like it.
Seriously, even trying to be charitable when figuring out what the most likely endgame that they have in mind is, I just can't. Do they actually think that if they want long enough, they can convince like 13 republicans to cave in and give them all this bullshit? It's never going to happen, not with Trump as president. Bookmark that.
These morons have done nothing except put a gun to their own heads, and the fucking gun isn't even loaded.
"These democrat scumbags will get nothing and like it."
...And give them bugs to eat and jobs cleaning toilet bowls. Nothing would warm my heart like seeing them all rolling up their sleeves and scrubbing toilet bowls, all the while singing their Marxist dirge.
Just the head and subheadline are ridiculous. "Excesses"? Tell me again which party in Congress wants to spend more. Is it even worth reading the article?
CB;dr?
Sullum - raging
Boehm - raging
Greenhunt - raging
Welch - raging
Britschgi - raging
Lancaster - raging
Damon - moderate to severe symptoms
De Rugy - moderate to severe symptoms
ENB - moderate symptoms
The Jacket - moderate symptoms
Petti - moderate symptoms
Robby - mild symptoms
Liz - sniffles
Stossel - no evidence of disease
"Is it even worth reading the article?"
Nope. Just look at the photo at the top. As usual, Reason chooses to frame their article with an image of some ignorant buffoons virtue signaling.
I'm convinced the biggest thing keeping voters ignorant is a very long-running psy-op, and Reason seems to be fully onboard with it.
“Still, the fact that the shutdown occurred at all is an increasingly rare example of Congress managing to fulfill its constitutional role of checking the executive. It's not an example of it failing to do its job.”
Shutdowns are a result of Congress failing to do its primary constitutional role of passing an annual budget. It’s that role that allows Congress to check the executive branch. Congress hasn’t passed a budget by regular order (codified into law in 1974) in 30 years.
Sorry, but no. This is not an example of Congress doing its job, especially in the context of failing to pass budgets repeatedly over decades of continuing resolutions and increased deficit spending. Although occasionally refusing to pass a budget might be an example of Congress rebuking the Executive, Congress got us into this spending mess all by itself!
Shut em down!
https://youtu.be/LXCrkY5WNA0?si=gBVt68SsJM8e1IhL
Democrats:
We're going to hold our breath until we turn blue if we don't get our way!
Trump:
Make it a very deep breath you take first. The layoff notices are already on my desk.
They shut down the government to side with illegalkind?
So how does this defense of INCREASED spending jive with all those abolish articles from a few months ago?
Those articles were cosplay a few months ago.
Would you support giving the Ds what they want if those costs were offset in some way? There's tons of bloat everywhere. If the answer is no, then you're just another partisan asshole with my credit card.