Us Government Shuts Down After Democrats Refuse to Back Republican Funding Plan
Posted3 months agoActive3 months ago
theguardian.comOtherstory
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Us Government ShutdownPartisan PoliticsGovernment Funding
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Us Government Shutdown
Partisan Politics
Government Funding
The US government shut down due to a funding dispute between Democrats and Republicans, with the discussion highlighting the partisan blame game and the need for compromise.
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Oct 1, 2025 at 12:16 AM EDT
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ID: 45434179Type: storyLast synced: 11/20/2025, 12:41:39 PM
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As someone who actually worked with the DNC a decadish ago, the issue is the organization has been hemorrhaging talent for a decade, and hiring pipeline became horrid in the run-up of the 2020 primaries, because it became multiple internal turf wars, as state level Dems were stagnating in states like CA and IL, thus leading to dissent internally.
The moderate vs progressive culture war didn't help internally either (eg. asking whether "Latinx" might be alienating Latiné voters wouldn't end well if you wanted a career in the CA and TX Dems).
As Eitan Hersh proved over a decade ago, most voters are already decided so a reduction in party membership didn't have much of an impact.
The biggest issue has been organizational. The best example is probably the GOP after Obama 1.
Ironically, lower civic engagement might actually help the Dems given the demographic shifts over the past decade.
At this point elections are won based on whether or not subsegments of the population can be rallied to show up or not show up to vote in elections.
This is becuase in most elections, most voters simply do not follow the news, and if they do it tends to be a quick video or a listicle.
Thus, the voters that can swing an election are those that are part of organized voting blocs (eg. A specific union or a local PTA), and cultivating those local groups and ties matters more.
2024 clearly says otherwise. They won't vote for R's, but they may also just not vote at all. That's almost as dangerous. The DNC definiately needs to energize its base again, not just say "well we aren't Trump".
Even the AP, with their dedication to balance, truth and accountability is restricted in what they can cover because they didn't bend the knee. And even their headline is blaming the shutdown on the Dems.
The Democrats are basically in complete shock right now and probably realizing that they’re gonna have to rebuild the entire party. I fail to see anyone at this point in time within the Democratic party that is capable of taking the reins that has any charisma or plan that really addresses the key issues that most Americans care about.
The only bright spot (as far as liberal media seems to be determined) for the Democrats seems to be a young upstart mayoral candidate in a large American city who they don’t even support.
If that's the case, so be it. Step down and leave it to those who do have all those factors.
>I fail to see anyone at this point in time within the Democratic party that is capable of taking the reins that has any charisma or plan that really addresses the key issues that most Americans care about.
I see some. They are of course cast down for the same reason Kamala was (despite her being much more moderate in comparison). Legacy media is not going to show off that charisma, you need other channels.
But looking through the comments in this community makes it clear what skew this place has.