The U.S. government officially shut down after Congress and the White House failed to reach an agreement on how to extend federal funding.
Donald Trump’s Republican Party controls both chambers of Congress, but it needs Democratic support to pass a bill in the Senate, where 60 votes are required. And the two parties failed to craft a bipartisan bill, with the Senate rejecting both a GOP proposal and a Democratic proposal just hours before the shutdown deadline.
It’s the first government shutdown since 2018, in Trump’s first term, which was the longest ever at 34 days, lasting into early 2019. There is no clear path to a resolution, with the two sides fundamentally at odds over how to resolve the impasse.
And if the Democratic party was any good, they would be listening to the will of the people and the desire for a general strike would flow up from the people. The decision to do it would still be top down, because someone has to figure out the logistics
There’s no general strike coming and we’re miles away from the slimmest possibility, but I’d like to hear leaders calling for one all the same
By calling for something so anti-billionaire, they would be signaling whose side they’re on, giving them more legitimacy