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Home » Government shutdown day 2 – live: Trump claims closure will save billions of dollars with ‘dead wood’ cleared out – UK Times
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Government shutdown day 2 – live: Trump claims closure will save billions of dollars with ‘dead wood’ cleared out – UK Times

By uk-times.com2 October 2025No Comments7 Mins Read
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JD Vance blames Democrats for ‘holding American people hostage’ to shutdown so Schumer can fight off AOC

JD Vance blames Democrats for ‘holding American people hostage’ to shutdown so Schumer can fight off AOC

Alex Croft2 October 2025 11:29

Houser Minority Leader says he hasn’t heard from Trump since Monday

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries has said that he hasn’t heard from the White House since a meeting with President Trump and other congressional leaders on Monday.

Speaking to CNN’s Jake Tapper on ‘The Lead’, Jeffries said: “We haven’t heard from the White House since the White House meeting on Monday.

The president has been behaving, you know, somewhat erratically and in [an] unconventional fashion in the context of the government shutting down.

“Clearly, they wanted to shut the government down, unfortunately.

We’re ready to work together to bring it back open, but to do it in a way where we enact a spending agreement that’s bipartisan, that meets the needs of the American people, while at the same time addresses the Republican health care crisis that is devastating everyday Americans all across the country.”

(Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Alex Croft2 October 2025 11:01

Congress will be paid during shutdown – while essential workers miss paychecks

Members of congress will continue receiving their paychecks during the US government shutdown – while hundreds of thousands of other federal workers will remain unpaid until the service is resumed as normal.

Thousands of essential workers, such as TSA agents and air traffic controllers, will remain on job during the shutdown.

But many essential employees won’t receive payment until funding resumes, meaning they could miss multiple paychecks, depending on how long the shutdown lasts.

But members of Congress will be paid throughout, while postal workers will also be paid – as the U.S. Postal Service is a self-funded agency.

All furloughed federal workers will be provided retroactive pay once operations resume, thanks to a 2019 law.

(AFP via Getty Images)

Alex Croft2 October 2025 10:28

Trump calls on Republicans to ‘clear out dead wood’

In a late night Truth Social post, Donald Trump has called on the Democrats to “clear out dead wood” after the US government shutdown.

The Trump administration have said suggested they might use the government shutdown to lay off a number of federal workers, in a move the president says would “get rid of” `Democratic policies.

Here’s what President Trump wrote:

Republicans must use this opportunity of Democrat forced closure to clear out dead wood, waste, and fraud. Billions of Dollars can be saved. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!

Alex Croft2 October 2025 09:59

Which essential government services will continue despite the shutdown

The Antideficiency Act includes explicit exceptions for “emergencies involving the safety of human life or the protection of property.”

Hence, when the government “shuts down,” federal law enforcers will keep up their investigations and border agents will stay on patrol. The CIA and NSA will continue their snooping.

The National Weather Service will keep its eyes on the skies, albeit with a skeleton crew, as will air traffic controllers. The TSA will also continue to scan your body parts and require you to remove your shoes.

Programs that are self-funding or funded by means other than annual appropriations usually continue. That includes the USPS, Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.

Benjamin Civiletti’s memo back in the 1980s also ruled that the president’s constitutional duties were unaffected by shutdowns. That argument has since been extended to court employees, members of Congress, and aides who support them in their essential activities. So those will keep running.

Fortunately for Congress and the President, their salaries will continue to be paid, as mandated by the Constitution.

Alex Croft2 October 2025 09:30

What is a government shutdown?

The U.S. government has once again been sent into shutdown.

For the 21st time in the past 50 years, Congress has not been able to reach an agreement on funding for federal agencies, despite negotiations stretching late into Tuesday night.

The U.S. Constitution hands Congress the sole power of the purse. “No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury,” reads Article I, “but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law.”

Under the Antideficiency Act, passed in 1884 and amended in 1950, the government is also prohibited from incurring expenses that Congress hasn’t already appropriated. The idea was to prevent federal departments from forcing Congress’s hand by deliberately blowing their entire budget early in the year, which used to happen frequently.

For a while, the U.S. government operated on the assumption that Congress couldn’t possibly have meant this to cover routine annual budgets. However, in 1980 and 1981, Jimmy Carter’s attorney general, Benjamin Civiletti, ruled that, in fact, it did — meaning all non-emergency work had to stop as soon as the funds ran out.

How long this lasts is anyone’s guess: the shortest shutdowns last only a day or a few hours. The longest was in 2018-19, during Trump’s first term, which lasted 34 days and wiped an estimated $6 billion or more off the country’s economy.

Read more from Io Dodds about how the shutdown will impact most Americans:

Rachel Dobkin2 October 2025 09:00

Watch: Senate Republicans react to possible federal firings

Rachel Dobkin2 October 2025 08:00

Trump’s budget chief says federal firings will come in ‘one to two’ days amid government shutdown

Russell Vought, the head of the Office of Management and Budget, reportedly told House Republicans on Wednesday that the Trump administration would begin firing federal workers in “one to two” days.

Less than a day into the government shutdown, Vought signaled that the administration was keeping its promise to use this time to get rid of more federal employees – a continuation of their goal to slash the federal workforce that began earlier this year.

Vought, an architect of Project 2025, did not specify where the firings would begin, such as a specific department or specific type of employee. Earlier this year, probationary employees, or those who are newly in their position, were among the first to be fired.

Read more from Ariana Baio:

Rachel Dobkin2 October 2025 07:00

Watch: Elizabeth Warren reacts to Trump admin pausing New York infrastructure projects

Senator Elizabeth Warren, a Massachusetts Democrat, reacted to the Trump administration pausing infrastructure projects in New York in an MSNBC interview Wednesday night.

Russ Vought, the director of the Office of Management and Budget, announced Wednesday morning, roughly $18 billion in New York City’s Hudson Tunnel Project and Second Ave Subway have been put on hold because of “DEI principles.”

Rachel Dobkin2 October 2025 06:00

Hesgseth ramps up war against leakers by introducing lie detector tests and NDAs to Pentagon, report says

The Pentagon plans to introduce mandatory non-disclosure agreements and lie detector tests for thousands of people, a new report reveals.

Under Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, the Pentagon plans to require that some staff sign NDAs that prohibit the “release of non-public information without approval or through a defined process” and subsequently take random polygraph tests, according to a draft memo from Deputy Defense Secretary Steve Feinberg reviewed by The Washington Post.

“The protection of sensitive information is paramount to our national security, the safety of our warfighters, and the preservation of critical decision space for our senior leaders,” Feinberg wrote.

The new orders would apply to an estimated 5,000 people working in the Office of the Defense Secretary and the Joint Staff, including military service members, civilian employees and contractors, the Post reports.

Read more from Katie Hawkinson:

Rachel Dobkin2 October 2025 05:30

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