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Aside from the routinely expiring debt ceiling, the practice of government shutdowns may be the most dramatic, unique and objectively silly quirks of how Washington, DC, works.
Shutdowns cost the government billions of dollars, they interrupt the productivity of federal workers, and it’s just plain a bad look for the most powerful democracy on earth to see its government literally sputter.
The concept of a shutdown is essentially unheard-of in much of the rest of the world. In most forms of democratic government, a failure to keep the government functioning would lead to the establishment of a new government.
But in the US, the threat of shutdown seems to come every year, and sometimes more often than that.
Separation of powers is supposed to be a feature of the US system, but recent years have seen a rise in dysfunction rather than the debate and consensus required to keep things going. Shutdowns did not exist until Jimmy Carter’s Attorney General wrote a memo in 1980 reinterpreting a law from the 1880s.
It doesn’t have to be this
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