After four weeks, the U.S. government is still shutdown as Republicans, with a majority in both the House and the Senate, are in no hurry to open Washington up again.

What is the longest government shutdown? Trump is about to break his own record
Republicans control the House of Representatives and the Senate, but they needed 60 votes in the latter to stop the shutdown from happening. The Democrats disagree with the Republicans on several issues and are not willing to give them the votes they need as they did back in March.
The shutdown allows Trump to avoid facing backlash and votes to release the Epstein files. The Administration continues to spend money on demolishing the East Wing of the White House to build a ballroom, give Argentina $40 billion in aid and spend $1 billion of taxpayer money to refurbish the airplane gifted by Qatar.
Trump, 79, thought the shutdown would last ten days at most, believing that the unprecedented and illegal firings of federal workers by his “grim reaper‚” OMB head Russ Vought, would be enough to get Democrats to give up.https://t.co/ZvZn7SH9qf
— The Daily Beast (@thedailybeast) November 1, 2025
Since the modern budgetary processes were first introduced in 1976 there have been 20 “funding gaps,” when funds were not appropriated to the federal government for a few hours or even days. Of those funding gaps, four were so substantial and consequential that they resulted in a government shutdown, when certain federal agencies were forced to limit their function and withhold paychecks for staff.
Today, Mike Johnson will keep the House adjourned for the 91st day out of the last 103.
— Ron Filipkowski (@RonFilipkowski) November 3, 2025
12 days of work in 103 days.
With full pay and benefits.
The senate has been working, so this is not about the shutdown.
It is about avoiding a vote to release the Epstein files.
Here are the four longest shutdowns in US history beginning with the longest:
Trump Administration: Dec. 22, 2018 – Jan. 25, 2019
Until now, the longest federal shutdown to date came during the Trump presidency, which latest for 35 days and affected nine executive departments and a quarter of all government activities. The dispute arose from a disagreement on Trump’s request for $5.7 billion in federal funds to pay for his much-vaunted US-Mexico border wall. On Jan. 25, Trump relented and agreed to sign a stopgap funding bill to reopen the government and he went on to utilise a national disaster fund to pay for the wall without Congressional consent.
US government is shutdown for 28 days, the 2nd longest
— Technosmith 🇨🇦🇺🇸 (@itechnosmith) October 29, 2025
Previously 35 days was the longest shutdown ever recorded before
Continuing US Government shutdown
And people losing jobs Could trigger a BANK RUN
1920’s style pic.twitter.com/6EH2MG2yEn
Clinton Administration: Dec. 16, 1995 – Jan. 6, 1996
The temporary funding bill agreed in December 1995 soon expired and Congress was once against met with short shrift from Clinton, who also vetoed their replacement funding proposal. The second only caused 284,000 furloughs but public polls generally found that most voters held the Republicans in Congress responsible for the shutdown. The 21-day shutdown may have actually bolstered Clinton’s popularity and has been linked to his successful 1996 election campaign.
Obama Administration: Oct. 1 – 17, 2013
The earlier part of President Obama’s second term in office was shaped by funding negotiations over the Affordable Care Act (ACA). It was a landmark piece of social legislation that would become a cornerstone of his achievements in the Oval Office but Obama was made to work hard for it. A House and Senate standoff over funding for the enormous programme resulted in a 16-day shutdown, during which 800,000 federal employees were furloughed indefinitely.
Clinton Administration: Nov. 14-19, 1995
Related stories
The earliest instance of these prolonged shutdowns came during the winter of 1995 when then-President Bill Clinton vetoed the funding bill sent to him by a Republican-led Congress. The first round of shutdown lasted for five days and saw as many as 800,000 federal workers furloughed. That standoff was resolved when Congress submitted a temporary budget bill, but was initially unable to find a permanent solution.
I was part of the internal Trump administration team trying to convince the president to end the shutdown in 2018 - 2019 — for 35 days — before people went hungry, workers lost pay, and government services collapsed.
— Miles Taylor (@MilesTaylorUSA) October 29, 2025
Here’s what I learned: he doesn’t give a shit.
When will this shutdown end?
There’s no end in sight. As soon as the shutdown ends, Mike Johnson will no longer have any excuses to not seat Adelita Grijalva, the representative in Congress who has the key to force the Trump Administration to open the Epstein files. This could easily be the longest shutdown in history, which will probably end at some point before Thanksgiving to avoid air traffic chaos for holiday travelers.


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