When Government Shuts Down, Only Workers Pay

A stop sign is seen in front of the US Capitol dome in Washington, DC, on September 30, 2025. (Photo by Alex WROBLEWSKI / AFP)

On October 1, 2025, the U.S. government shut down after Congress deadlocked over passing a bill to keep funding government services. As a result, hundreds of thousands of federal workers have been furloughed, while many others have to work without pay, and the millions who rely on public services, like food assistance and housing aid, will be left in uncertainty. This isn’t a natural disaster. It’s an artificial crisis, manufactured by political standstill in the wealthiest country in human history.

Politicians have as usual turned this shutdown into a blame game, Democrats blaming Republicans, Republicans blaming Democrats. But for working-class people, none of this is a game. The costs will be immediate and concrete, especially in the agencies people rely on for health and safety. At the Department of Health and Human Services, more than 40% of the staff will be on unpaid leave. The CDC and the National Institutes of Health will also see great reductions, derailing research, oversight, and public health programs.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration chose to pause $2.1 billion in Chicago infrastructure projects, likely to penalize a city outside its base. Trump himself called the shutdown an “unprecedented opportunity” to punish political opponents by punishing millions of ordinary people, showing how crises like this are weaponized.

But, while all of this is happening, there is one thing that never stops: the flow of money to the rich. Debt payments continue. Military spending goes on. When it comes to banks and war contractors, there is no shutdown. It’s only the livelihoods of workers and the poor that are put on hold.

The government cuts workers’ union contracts and jobs, but it guarantees profits for the rich without interruption. This latest crisis reveals the truth about the U.S. government. It is not a neutral institution trying to balance the interests of various constituencies. It is an instrument of the capitalist class, and shutdowns just show the reality of the system they manage.

This is why calling the shutdown a political stalemate misses the point. Bipartisanship will not resolve this, because the issue is not about two parties that can’t get along. Both Democrats and Republicans ultimately serve the same system, and they turn vital services into bargaining chips in their disputes.

Workers should not have to live with the constant threat that their wages, their food assistance, or their children’s care depend on the outcome of budget fights. In a society with so much wealth, the problem isn’t scarcity, it’s control. Shutdowns remind us that as long as politics remains in the hands of the rich, the working majority will always be left paying the bill.