
The United States federal government shut down in the early morning of Oct. 1 after Congress failed to pass funding[1] for federal programs and services.
Republicans are seeking a bill to temporarily extend federal spending at current levels without any add-ons. Democrats are pushing to extend expiring subsidies for Affordable Care Act[2] health plans. Democrats have also said they want to reverse Medicaid cuts that President Donald Trump signed into law this summer.
Trump and his administration — which has already defied[3] norms[4] on executive power[5] — likely will seek to exert more power[6] during the shutdown, including potentially laying off federal workers.
PolitiFact is live fact-checking the shutdown, including rhetoric from both sides of the aisle. Send fact-check suggestions to [email protected][7].
Live fact-checks, updates from the 2025 federal government shutdown
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References
- ^ failed to pass funding (apnews.com)
- ^ expiring subsidies for Affordable Care Act (www.politifact.com)
- ^ defied (www.politifact.com)
- ^ norms (www.politifact.com)
- ^ executive power (www.politifact.com)
- ^ exert more power (www.politifact.com)
- ^ [email protected] (www.politifact.com)