The story of the current government shutdown is a chronology of failure, marked by a series of predictable and nearly identical failed votes in the US Senate. On Wednesday, for the sixth time in just over a week, the chamber failed to advance legislation to reopen the government, a repeated exercise in futility that has only served to deepen the crisis.
The sequence of events has become routine. First, the Democratic leadership brings up a proposal to fund the government that includes their key demand: an extension of Affordable Care Act (ACA) tax credits. It fails to get the 60 votes needed to overcome a Republican filibuster.
Next, the Republican leadership offers its own proposal: a short-term funding bill with no healthcare provisions. This measure likewise fails to garner the necessary support, this time blocked by the united Democratic caucus.
Throughout this process, the vote tallies have remained remarkably static. No senators have broken ranks or changed their votes, signaling a complete lack of progress in behind-the-scenes negotiations. Each failed vote simply confirms the deadlock that was evident from the start.
This chronology of failure has had devastating real-world consequences, leading to furloughs, airport disruptions, and the looming threat of a missed military payday. The repeated votes are not attempts to find a solution but are political messaging exercises designed to assign blame. As long as this pattern continues, the shutdown will be the only outcome.