Flights are delayed. Tax hotlines are quiet. Farmers can’t get their loans. The government shutdown, two weeks old, is beginning to reach Americans.
Congress has moved no closer to a deal to bring the government back to life. And in the meantime, President Trump is using the impasse to shrink the government and to punish political foes. His administration has frozen or canceled around $28 billion for projects primarily in places governed by Democrats. (The president posted a parody video last week that depicts his budget director as Democrats’ “reaper.”)
Today’s newsletter is a guide to what’s happening.
An opening
From the start, Trump has hailed the shutdown as an “unprecedented opportunity” to trim fat from the government. The administration has so far targeted two main buckets of federal funding, a Times analysis found.
Transportation. Trump withheld billions of dollars that Congress had approved for transportation projects in New York and Illinois. The White House said it was checking to see whether the contracts contained diversity provisions. But Trump has muddled that story by talking openly about targeting Democrats amid feuds with party leaders in those states.
Energy. The administration said it would terminate at least $7.6 billion in grants for energy projects in 16 states, 14 led by Democrats. The Energy Department said the projects were “not economically viable” or did not advance Trump’s agenda.
At the same time, the administration says it will fire more than 4,000 government workers. The White House insists the cuts are necessary to keep essential government services up and running. But budget experts say that’s a pretense, and the maneuver may be illegal.
Trump promised that he would soon publish a list of agencies and programs he plans to cut permanently. “We are closing up Democrat programs that we disagree with, and they’re never going to open again,” he said. The president has also threatened to deny furloughed workers back pay, which would violate a federal law he signed in 2019.
Carve-outs
Not everyone is feeling the pain.
The administration used money from customs duties to fund a federal nutrition aid program, and it worked to keep rural airports open. It also reversed layoffs for hundreds of C.D.C. scientists who it said were fired by mistake. My colleagues Tony Romm and Catie Edmondson explain:
Mr. Trump has behaved much differently with agencies and programs he supports, or those that present risk of political blowback. There, the administration has relied on creative accounting to keep some workers paid and programs functioning.
Now Trump says he has “identified funds” that would allow the government to pay military troops during the shutdown, even though Congress hasn’t allocated money for that purpose.
Usually, more than one million active-duty service members stop receiving paychecks while the government is closed. It’s politically unpopular to let the troops languish, so during previous shutdowns, their financial hardship brought lawmakers to the negotiating table.
But Trump is circumventing the problem, which means the shutdown may drag on longer this time.
More coverage
-
More than a dozen airports refused to display a video of Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, blaming Democrats for the shutdown and any travel disruptions it causes.
-
Trump’s layoffs at the Education Department affected employees working on special education, funding for low-income students and civil rights enforcement.
THE LATEST NEWS
Supreme Court
-
Alex Jones must pay $1.4 billion in damages to the families of the children killed in the Sandy Hook shooting, after the Supreme Court rejected his appeal.
-
Recent Supreme Court decisions have weakened the Voting Rights Act. The justices will hear arguments today over one of the law’s remaining pillars, on race and voting districts.
U.S. Boat Strikes
-
The U.S. killed six people when it struck another boat in international waters near Venezuela, Trump said. The military has now killed 27 people on boats like this, treating them like enemy soldiers in a war zone rather than criminal suspects.
-
As with the other strikes, Trump declared without evidence that the victims were moving drugs.
-
Look at a map of how drugs arrive in the U.S. by sea. Most enter via the Pacific Ocean, not the Caribbean Sea.
More on Politics
-
Some Chicago residents are openly fighting back against ICE. Others have formed volunteer groups to monitor their neighborhoods or are honking when they see agents.
-
Trump awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, America’s highest civilian honor, to Charlie Kirk. Erika Kirk, his widow, accepted it on what would have been his 32nd birthday.
-
The Democratic governor of Maine, Janet Mills, will run to challenge Susan Collins, a Republican, for her Senate seat next year.
Israel and Gaza
-
Israel may limit aid to punish Hamas for not immediately returning the remains of some hostages. A Hamas official said Gaza’s devastation made the bodies difficult to retrieve.
-
A lasting peace could bring a new wave of business investments in the Middle East, the DealBook newsletter explains.
More International News
-
Madagascar’s military seized power after its Parliament voted to impeach the president, who went into hiding after weeks of bloody protests.
-
France’s prime minister made a significant concession as he seeks to avoid having to resign for a second time: He offered to delay an unpopular pension overhaul until at least 2027.
-
Thousands of Guatemalan police officers are searching for 20 escaped inmates, all accused of being members of the same major gang.
Other Big Stories
-
Hundreds of Texas schools have adopted a Bible-infused curriculum for English classes. The lessons feature extensive content about Christianity, a New York Times analysis found.
-
A Pennsylvania man pleaded guilty to firebombing Gov. Josh Shapiro’s residence. The charges he admitted include attempted murder: He faces 25 to 50 years in prison.
-
California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, vetoed a bill that sought to ban so-called forever chemicals in nonstick cookware. He said it could have raised prices.
D’ANGELO, 1974-2025
The R&B star D’Angelo died yesterday at 51. His family said the cause was cancer. D’Angelo found fame in the 1990s and early 2000s with an innovative and sensuous take on the genre, but he spent much of the rest of his career removed from the public eye.
Jon Pareles, a pop music correspondent, writes:
He could be a one-man studio band in the mold of Prince and Stevie Wonder, overdubbing nearly all the instruments. He had a silken falsetto to rival Marvin Gaye, Smokey Robinson, Curtis Mayfield and Al Green. He could also multitrack himself to simulate the collective yowl and cackle of Funkadelic or Sly & the Family Stone. He had voices to convey richly seductive physical pleasures, unwavering devotion and gritty political resistance.
Americans were searching online for news about D’Angelo. For a sampling of his extraordinary musical scope, Jon put together a list of D’Angelo’s 14 essential songs. We also have an account of how he made his most acclaimed album, “Voodoo.”
THE MORNING QUIZ
This question comes from a recent edition of the newsletter. Click an answer to see if you’re right. (The link will be free.)
Which famously beautiful city has proposed removing an unusual public fountain?
A. San Francisco: the Vaillancourt Fountain
B. Seoul: the Banpo Bridge Fountain
C. Paris: the Stravinsky Fountain
D. Valencia, Spain: the Water Boat Fountain
OPINIONS
“The enthusiasm gap is real”: New Jersey will vote for its next governor this November. Eleven local leaders assessed the candidates’ qualifications and visions for the state.
The best safeguard against tyranny is the belief in something greater than the authority of one man, be it family, equality or God, Jonathan Freedland writes.
Here’s a column by Thomas Friedman on Benjamin Netanyahu and Hamas.
MORNING READS
“I’m losing who I am”: Dr. Sue Goldie found acclaim explaining the world’s biggest health problems. Now, she’s trying to understand how one disease — Parkinson’s — is changing her own body.
An industry of theft: About 80,000 phones were stolen in London last year. The police finally know where they went.
Your pick: The most-clicked story in The Morning yesterday was an Opinion article by a woman who decided to stop making family dinner.
Art investigator: Milton Esterow, a culture journalist who broke stories of artwork looted by the Nazis, died at 97. He started at The Times in 1945 and wrote for the paper until his death. (His final article is forthcoming.)
SPORTS
Baseball: The Dodgers have won two straight games against the Brewers. Now, the 2018 NLCS rematch is heading from Milwaukee to Los Angeles.
Gymnastics: Simone Biles is sure she’ll be at the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. But she’s not sure she’ll compete.
KEVIN FEDERLINE’S MEMOIR
In 2021, the “Free Britney” movement helped get Britney Spears released from a conservatorship that had overseen her life and finances for over a decade. Now, the father of her children, Kevin Federline, is arguing that those fans should be concerned about Spears’s well-being in the wake of her emancipation.
In a memoir scheduled to publish next week, Federline, 47, recounts how his sons returned from Spears’s house in recent years and told him they woke up to her watching them sleep with a knife in her hand. “It’s become impossible to pretend everything’s OK,” he writes in the memoir, adding: “My biggest fear is that our sons will be left holding the pieces.”
A spokesman for Spears declined to comment. Spears has said that the custody battle with Federline was traumatizing and that he had “tried to convince everyone that I was completely out of control.”
More on culture
-
Netflix is stepping into the world of podcasts: Starting next year, it will stream shows from Spotify about sports, culture, entertainment and true crime.
-
Matcha, the green powder once mostly confined to formal tea ceremonies, is now everywhere — and counterfeiters are taking advantage. Can it survive its own popularity?
THE MORNING RECOMMENDS …
Bake these Southwest-inspired enchiladas. They can be ready in about an hour.
Visit Madison, Wis., for impressive meals and good music.
Cozy up with a slouchy sweater and a woody candle.
Paint your walls with dirty pastel colors.
GAMES
Here is today’s Spelling Bee. Yesterday’s pangram was pityingly.
Here are today’s Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections, Sports Connections and Strands.
And you may recognize one of the creators of today’s crossword puzzle: Nick Offerman of “Parks and Recreation” fame.
Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow.
Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox. Reach our team at [email protected].
Amelia Nierenberg contributed to this newsletter.
Evan Gorelick is a New York-based writer for The Morning, the flagship daily newsletter of The Times.
The post The Shutdown Enters Its Third Week appeared first on New York Times.