Stuff You Should Know - How Government Shutdowns Work
Episode Date: September 10, 2019Every year Congress decides how the federal government will spend money. Simple enough, but in practice politics tend to mess it up. Sometimes it gets so messy the budget doesn’t get passed and part...s of the government shut down. Then the hurting begins. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
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but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
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Hello, stuff you should know.
Come and see us in Orlando or New Orleans,
because that's your last chance.
Yep, Orlando, we're going to be
at the Plaza Live October 9th.
New Orleans, we're gonna be at the Civic Theater October 10th.
Just go to sysklive.com and you will find info
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Ticket links are weirdly hard to find,
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Austin, or Chicago, and you will find
what you're looking for.
See you guys soon.
Welcome to Step You Should Know,
a production of iHeartRadio's How Stuff Works.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
So I'm Josh Clark, and there's Charles Evichuk Bryant,
and there's Jerry over there, and this is the podcast.
Like I said, in particular,
it's the Step You Should Know podcast.
So that's not where you're here to listen to,
you're in the wrong place.
And if you don't wanna listen to us
talk about government shutdowns,
then you're in the wrong place.
But who doesn't wanna know about government shutdowns?
Yeah, I agree.
Educate yourselves.
Right, as a matter of fact.
Because it's gonna happen again soon enough.
That's exactly right.
That is why I wanted to do this episode.
Because I've been meaning for us to do this for years now,
and every time we do it, and it's like,
or every time I go to do it,
say let's do a government shutdown episode,
I think is what I'm trying to say.
Sorry, I just drank a Red Bull
because I was about to fall over,
and now I'm talking really fast.
Oh, good Lord.
Just give me like 10 minutes.
Okay, and you're drinking a Coca-Cola.
Well, we don't have Coke Zero here anymore,
this is all we have.
You want that extra caffeine kick on top of the Red Bull.
I think I have, just this 12 ounce can,
it's not even gone,
and I think I've burned a hole in my stomach.
It's crazy.
But delicious.
It is delicious, I'll give you that.
But Coke Zero is really delicious, too,
for being a diet, Cola.
At any rate, government shutdowns.
You were saying, yeah, every time we go to do this.
The government shutdown,
so it looks like we're chasing a trend,
so we have to wait.
And I'm like, finally, the time is right.
Because it wouldn't be cool
to do one in the midst of one, is that the deal?
Definitely not.
No, that's like buying a t-shirt at a concert,
and then putting that t-shirt on,
and looking around like, yeah, I know what's up.
At the concert, with that horrible smell,
that new t-shirt, especially concert t-shirts,
that are printed out of straight chemicals.
Out of Buffalo Bill's basement, made of skin.
Man, he's been on my mind a lot.
Because of the eggine episode?
Well, because that, and then I just saw
on the movie crushers page,
someone posted a funny little thing
that was a Buffalo Bill Tinder profile.
It was really funny.
I gotta see that.
And then there was something else from this past weekend,
it was a lot of Buffalo Bill happening.
He's everywhere.
Yeah, yeah.
Remember we used to send each other that one screenshot?
Yeah.
That's great.
That's back when we shared a cubicle wall.
I know, and it was easy enough to do that.
Back in the day.
Now we have gold-plated Aeron chairs.
And no walls anywhere.
I'd take a regular Aeron.
I think that's what you're sitting in right now.
Oh, is it?
That's quite comfy.
So anyway, welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Thirst-Chuck.
We should edit all that other stuff out, don't you think?
Or get money from Red Bull, Coca-Cola, and Aeron.
You're right.
And Buffalo Bill.
Right.
Or the Buffalo Bill's football team.
Dang, man.
You just really pulled it together with that last one.
So we've been through some shutdowns in our time, Chuck.
Sure, in our day.
Yeah.
As a matter of fact, you'd think based
on how common they kind of seem.
I mean, every few years there's like the federal government.
I should say for our fellow listeners
outside of the United States.
Our government is broken.
Right.
We're talking about government shutdowns.
And it's a lot like what it sounds like.
I mean, we'll get to the nuts and bolts of it, obviously.
But it's basically where the federal government,
not state governments, but the federal USA government,
parts of it just stop functioning.
And the reason they stop functioning
is because those agencies, those parts of the federal government,
have not been funded.
And since they haven't been funded by law,
by Congressional Act from years back,
they are not allowed to pay workers any longer.
They're not even allowed to accept volunteer work
from their workers.
So with no workers, that means the agency shuts down.
And that's a government shutdown.
That's what we're talking about.
Literally parts of the government shutdown.
Yeah, and again, we will get into all the nuts and bolts,
but it shuts down because of funding gaps.
And those funding gaps happen almost always
because of entrenched politics.
Yeah, it's two sides playing chicken over the budget.
And when the government shutdown happens,
neither side blinked.
Right, and it's also very important to point out
that a big part of government shutdowns
is trying to get the other side to maybe not accept to blame,
because no one ever does, it seems like.
But at least the perception in the general media
that this person or this side is the one to blame.
Yeah, and more often than not,
public polling shows that it's Congress
that almost always takes the blame.
Oh, really?
Until this last one, it was always Congress.
Right.
No matter what, which is funny that they would try
to pull this off because it's so politically risky,
because it's so damaging on an individual level
among like federal employees or just average Americans,
but also on a national level.
Yeah, our economy takes a huge hit.
Huge hit that we just never regain.
All right, that's a great setup.
I think so too.
So Chuck, to start, I think we should talk about
how money moves around the federal government, don't you?
Yeah, and this is, again, if you live outside the country
and even if you live in the United States,
you may not understand what power of the purse means,
but in the United States and in the US Constitution,
Article I, Section 9, Clause 7.
Yeah, not even the Bill of Rights, like the Constitution.
Yeah.
Like this was one of the first things they thought about.
It was Congress who was granted control over the money.
So the president can't just fund something.
The Senate can't just fund something.
Everything has to be agreed on and they can't spend a dime
without Congress's express approval
through this process we're gonna get into
called appropriations.
Right, and so in the Constitution,
it just said the Congress is the one that approves all money.
Everything comes through Congress, right?
Yeah, we should read that though
because it does have one funny line.
You go ahead.
And from the Constitution,
no money shall be drawn from the Treasury,
but in consequence of the appropriations made by law,
so far so good, and a regular statement
of account of receipts and expenditures of all money
shall be published from time to time.
It's very nonspecific.
Whenever you get to it.
Why not like in November of every year?
I honestly don't know.
Because I mean, from time to time makes it seem unimportant.
It makes it seem,
what's the word when you don't have to do something?
Makes it seem non-mandatory.
Yeah, optional.
Optional, sure.
That's the word.
I know you so well after all these years.
So that's from Article One of the Constitution.
And presidents from 1778 onward said,
okay, I can work with that.
There's a huge loophole here.
Like no, I can't spend money myself.
Like I can't pay anybody myself.
I have to wait for Congress.
But that doesn't mean I can't get the work done first.
And then when it comes time to pay,
I can just direct this contractor, vendor, whoever,
militiamen to Congress to go get money.
Yeah, which is really,
I mean, that is so United States government.
To be like, well, I'm technically not writing the check.
I've just engaged someone's services
and now we owe them this money.
Yeah, Congress, pay this guy.
He did what he's saying he did.
And so there was this representative in Virginia
who was not happy about this,
this kind of precedent that had been adopted
by the executive branch.
This representative said in 1806
that presidents were acting like a saucy boy
whose wealthy grandfather was going to cover his needs.
And that that was the case.
So eventually Congress said,
we got to close this loophole.
And they did in 1884, I think.
Yeah, the Anti-Deficiency Act basically said,
no, you can't just pay the guy to paint your house
and then stand there tapping your toes,
looking at the guy with the checkbook.
Right, exactly.
As a matter of fact, they said,
you can't spend a single dime
that Congress hasn't already appropriated for that.
That's right.
You just can't do it.
So much so that again,
you can't even accept volunteer work
unless it is basically to protect life or public safety,
something really, really important.
But when we say we fund you,
Congress funds the executive branch,
all the agencies in the federal government,
we really mean it.
And that's what the Anti-Deficiency Act really said.
Yeah, but it would take until 1974
when Richard Nixon signed the Congress Budget
and Impoundment Control Act.
It's a barn burner.
Yeah, but that's what really changed everything
and that's what kind of laid out this process
that we still work with today or don't work with.
Or sit on our hands and hold our breath.
Right, ideally it functions kind of clunky
even in its best form, but purposefully so.
It's to keep Congress from being profligate
with its spending, right?
Like I mean, it's to say this group over here
and this group over here,
we're taking the same task in making you guys do it
twice separately and then come together
and hammer out the details.
Yeah, it's really discouraging to look at the history
of our country and the idea should be that like,
all right, we know that in this country
we have a lot of people that feel one way
about a lot of stuff,
a lot of people that feel the other way
and the government's job should be to come together
and negotiate and find nice middle grounds.
And it seems like it's more like
the government just finds loopholes
and is sneaky and underhanded to find workarounds
from actually trying to work together
and find the middle ground.
Right.
It stinks.
It does stink a little bit.
Sick of it.
I'm pretty fed up with government too.
I think most people in America
and I would gather the UK too.
All right, oh man, especially right now.
So here's how it happens.
Every year, the two chambers of Congress,
they have to agree on a budget for the discretionary spending
which is I think only 30% of the overall budget
is discretionary.
Everything else is mandatory or non-discretionary
and that means stuff that you just can't not pay for.
Right, and it's mostly things like Medicaid, Medicare,
Social Security, entitlement programs
to where these are mandatory programs
that are created by an act of Congress
that says whatever these programs need to run and operate,
that's how much Congress gives them.
Right.
There's no spending levels.
There's no, what about this?
Like you can go in and monkey with the operation
by Congressional Act,
but as far as spending and budget goes,
whatever they need, they get.
That's right.
The other stuff, the discretionary stuff,
that's, what'd you say, about 30% of the budget?
It's 30%, but that's still like in 2018,
that was $1.2 trillion and it's really important stuff.
It's not like the mandatory spending
is the only important stuff.
We're talking about the FDA, Homeland Security, TSA,
the NIH, National Parks, the IRS.
The Department of Defense.
Yeah, big time stuff.
Basically everything except Social Security,
Medicaid, and Medicare.
Oh really, is that 70%?
Essentially.
Geez.
I know.
I know.
All right, so this all starts this appropriations process.
It's laid out for the first Monday in February.
And this is the deadline.
It lines up with the deadline for the President
to submit their budget to Congress,
which you always hear this is the President's budget.
The President oversees stuff and approves stuff,
but the President's not in there
with the calculator crunching numbers.
No, no, no, it's the Office of Management and Budget
that does it for the President.
That's right.
But it's under the President's direction.
The President says, I really want to do this,
but I don't want to do this anymore.
But the thing is, it's almost like a little kid
going through the Montgomery Ward Wishbook
and then writing their list in Cran
that has about the same polling power
as the President's budget.
It really is saying, this is what the President wants to do,
and then Congress either says, these are good ideas
or they say, we're not listening to that at all
because it's not legally binding in any way.
There's probably, in fact, party line templates
that they just throw down, like a mad lib,
and they tweak it a little bit, but they say,
like, oh, here's the Republican style budget,
and here's the Democratic style budget.
Obama or Trump, and now do your minor tweaks.
Right, I think that is kind of,
it's gotta be because it's a huge, massive document.
Yeah, they can't start from scratch every time, can they?
No, it's gotta be like the first few pages
are what really count, you know what I mean?
It's gotta be.
But again, this is like, they call it in this article,
like the wish list of funding priorities,
and that's a good way to put it.
The Montgomery Ward Wishbook wish list, do you remember that?
I was a Sears kid.
I didn't discriminate, I went through all of them
to make sure I had all my bases covered.
Yeah, we didn't even have Montgomery Ward,
so I've never laid eyes upon that catalog.
It was good, it was a good one.
I put it up against the Sears one.
Yeah, we had Sears, and then, I guess,
Service Merchandise was another pick.
Oh, I remember that.
Didn't they sell everything from like
Diamond Rings to Casio keyboards?
Oh, they sold everything.
I think I bought my very first guitar
from Service Merchandise.
Oh, nice.
And returned it like a week later
because it was cruddy.
Broken.
And I went to a real guitar store.
Sam Ash?
No, actually, I remember I went to Dirt Cheap Music
on Memorial Drive, it's not there anymore.
Oh, it's good, shop local.
Yeah, yeah.
Dirt Cheap.
Buzz marketing for a business that is no longer around.
So they've got this wish list, then it goes onto Congress,
and they have to pass what's called
a concurrent budget resolution.
Right, and Congress can totally ignore the President's budget.
They can take it into consideration.
If Congress is controlled by the same party
the President is, the President's wishes
are probably going to be taken into consideration.
But ultimately, Congress says this is what we want to do.
And from what I can tell when they come up
with this concurrent budget, right?
Yeah, concurrent budget, a CBSR,
concurrent budget resolution.
It's basically just setting the spending for the year, right?
That's all that is, isn't it?
Like the cap on what the federal government
can spend entirely?
I think so.
It's just that broad agreement of the total amount of spending.
OK.
And then it starts to get divvied up.
Yeah, they're not in the weeds at this point.
No.
But they're supposed to pass that by mid-April.
And that's where they set these spending levels
for 20 categories.
And this is where it starts to break down, or not break down,
but in a bad way.
But they start to break it down because it's
such a massive thing, you've got to break it down
in the smaller departments.
Right, so Congress says here's the total amount of money
that we're going to spend this year.
And it goes to the Appropriations Committee
in the Senate and the Appropriations Committee
in the House.
And then each of them says, OK, we've got this whole.
Let's divvy it up into 12 slices, not necessarily equal slices.
I think they'd probably be pretty lazy.
But they say, agriculture and rural development,
you're going to get this much this year.
Commerce, justice, and science, you're
going to get this much, like this slice of the pie.
And they do that over 12 departments
that roughly correspond to the different cabinet posts
in the federal government.
That's right.
And it's up to those subcommittees,
those 12 different ones, once they get their little slice
of pie, to then decide how to eat that pie,
or eat that piece of the pie.
There's an appropriations subcommittee
that says, this is how you're going to spend this.
That's right.
And they have hearings and stuff like that,
where the heads of these departments come and say,
we really need this.
We've got some really exciting stuff coming up.
Give us some more money.
We figured out how to ride sharks and hunt
dolphins with spear guns.
And we really want to get into that this year.
Or we really need to build this thing.
Or the military really needs to upgrade that thing, stuff
like that.
And then these appropriations subcommittees,
each one dedicated to a group of agencies or an agency,
just a single one, say, OK, this is how
we're going to spend this money.
And then once that happens in the House,
and the same thing happens in the Senate,
those two groups, the appropriations subcommittees,
for each of these 12 slices of pie, come together.
Ideally.
And they say, well, we came up with this.
What did you guys come up with?
And they say, well, we came up with this,
and we're off by $7 billion.
How are we going to figure this out?
That's great, only $7 billion.
Right.
That's nothing these days.
Well, they negotiate with each other
to come up with a joint spending bill.
I imagine those meetings are contentious and tough.
Sure.
And eventually, though, ideally, they
negotiate that spending bill.
Then that gets sent to the president.
And they can veto that or sign that.
Right.
So remember, there's actually 24 of these
going on over 12 different slices of pie.
And when they come back together and form
12 different appropriations resolutions,
they can say, we're done.
This is good.
Let's send it to the president.
And the president can sign that.
If things are going along really smoothly
and Congress wants to show off, they'll
say, we want to get all these together in one package.
We're going to present all 12 to the president.
And the president can either sign or veto them.
So the president can sign or veto each one separately
in small groups or as a whole.
As a whole is called omnibus.
Yeah, if you've ever heard the term omnibus spending bill
and you're like, what in the world is that?
That just means it's everything grouped together.
Right.
And so one reason that you would go through the headache
of trying to put all 12 of those appropriations bills
into one package is that if there's
something in one of those appropriations bills
that you want out, you've got a lot more leverage
than the other 11 that you can trade from the budget
as a whole to get that thing out or get this thing in.
If it's one appropriations bill, you have much less leverage.
So that's why they would go to that trouble.
But that's fairly rare, I believe.
Yeah, and this is all due by October 1st,
because that is the beginning of the federal government's
fiscal year, is October 1.
And since we've been doing this in modern times,
I believe 1977 was when we started this process,
Congress has passed all 12 by October 1st by that deadline
only four times.
Four times.
That's right.
So we'll take a break and we'll discuss
what happens all of the other times right after this.
Hey, dude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker
necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars, friends,
and nonstop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger and the dial-up
sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there when the nostalgia starts
flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it, and popping it back in,
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s, called on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when
questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
OK, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice
would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place,
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, god.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS, because I'll be there
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Oh, man.
And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yeah, we know that, Michael, and a different hot, sexy teen
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Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general, can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say bye,
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Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart
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So OK, Congress comes along.
Also, big shout out to Dave Roos.
This is his first article that we're doing an episode on.
Yeah, Dave is one of the great writers
from HowStuffWorks.com that we long admired over the years
and tapped him to do some stuff for us.
Tapping him.
We're tapping him and he's tapping back.
It's great.
We've got a pretty great little stable going here.
We've got Dave Roos, Julia Layton, and The Grabster,
all writing for stuff you should know right now.
That's right.
And I think if they keep up the good work,
then that's all we need.
Sure, yeah, I think so too.
Because we still put together our own stuff too.
Yes, we do.
I want to give us a pat on the back as well.
All right, that's fine.
All right, so I just pulled a muscle in my arm.
I can't write this week.
So like we said before the break,
this has only happened four times in since 1977
that all 12 appropriations bills were passed
by that October 1 deadline.
It's so funny.
So when it comes to October 2, it
doesn't mean if we haven't passed those appropriations
bills, it's like everything just stops working.
Right.
Because if you pay attention to the news,
you will notice that there's something
called a continuing resolution.
So this can happen for a lot of reasons.
One good and sort of non-offensive reason
could be that, man, we were really close
and we're almost there.
We just need another week or the weekend.
We'll work through the weekend even to get this done.
Right.
A good but offensive reason is because someone farted
and everyone cleared out of the chamber
and missed the deadline.
So they had to do a continuing resolution.
No, I mean, if they're close and they just need a few more
days to work it out, then that can happen.
They'll pass a continuing resolution, which means everything
stays the same.
You don't get any more money or you don't get money taken away.
Just operate as usual.
Right.
You can't increase spending.
You can spend differently or whatever,
but you can't spend above the levels
of the previous fiscal year that you're currently in, right?
That's right.
OK, I'm with you.
I think a continuing resolution, whether it's one for a day
or for a year, and there have been ones that have been like
year-long continuing resolutions.
Yeah, there's no limit.
You can pass them forever long you think you need.
Right.
It does show that negotiations are still ongoing.
They haven't broken down.
They just haven't reached the point
where they're in agreement yet.
That's right.
The problem comes when they stop issuing
continuing resolutions.
That's right.
Dave Thu and a few pretty cool facts here.
186 continuing resolutions have been passed since 1977.
And 117 of those or those have been since 1998.
So it's taken them 117 times that they could not
work it out since 1998.
That's a lot.
Yeah, it is.
But if you think about it, it's about evenly split.
Well, no, it's not evenly split.
It's like 70 to, I think, 69 to 117 over two 20-year periods.
Oh, yeah.
And it does seem to be getting worse,
but that's kind of lopsided because in 2001,
there were 21 of that 117.
21 of them all came in 2001.
So I'm not quite sure about this,
but I wonder, is a number, an increase in continuing
resolutions, is that like a barometer for government
or how government's working?
I don't know.
Because I wonder, because I mean, ideally,
like they would get all this done by the October 1st deadline
every time.
Well, it depends because as this points out,
like sometimes it is over the weekend
and it's just a few days and they're like really close
to having it worked out.
So to me, that's not the biggest deal in the world.
That doesn't mean the government isn't functioning well.
I mean, as well as it ever does.
Am I right?
But like in 2007, 11 and 13, they were all year long.
There were no appropriations bills.
Right.
They just said we're just going to repeat last year.
Or no real appropriations bills, I guess.
Right.
They just said, remember the spending levels from before?
Go with God.
That's what you got again this year because we can't come
to an agreement.
That's when things are bad.
So continuing resolutions too, like it doesn't affect spending
levels or it doesn't increase them.
It can't.
I wonder, I don't know if it can decrease them or not.
I know you just basically said the same spending
level as last year, so maybe it can't decrease them either.
I think you can't decrease.
I think it's just your current funding is locked.
Right.
But you can't attach riders on to continuing resolutions.
Yeah, these policy riders, those
can be like the make or break.
And if it's clean, which I don't know how often that happens,
I'd be curious to see a stat.
But if it's a clean policy rider,
that means it has nothing else or a clean.
CR.
CR.
It doesn't have any policy riders.
That's right.
So a lot of times though, if there's a policy rider on a CR,
it might be like, OK, we can't come to an agreement
about Medicaid funding abortion.
That was a big one in the 1970s.
Yeah.
And but in this same appropriations bill
that we're haggling over, there's
this other thing that's super critical.
It's like local hospitals aren't going to get any NICU
funding, and it's about to run out.
So we need to increase the NICU funding for local hospitals.
And we'll attach that as a policy rider
to this continuing resolution, because this is kind of an
emergency, and it doesn't really have anything to do
with the contentious part that's keeping the policy
or the appropriations bill from being passed.
Right.
So that's, I think, usually what happens with that.
You know what show really nails this stuff is Veep.
Oh my gosh.
For all its like, you know, comedy and funny stuff,
it seems like they really nail kind of what it's like
in Washington.
Sure.
Because there's a lot of talk of this kind of stuff.
Clean bills and riders and who's on whose side
and can we sway this one person over to our side.
Yeah, a lot of just dirty, dirty language.
Oh yeah, man, Julie Louis-Dreyfus.
She is a, she's an international treasure.
Totally.
I had one interaction with her briefly.
When?
In LA, in my friend's building in Los Feliz,
the Hollymont building, he lived there, Scotty,
he knows Scotty.
Sure, of course.
And we had a case of beer and a pizza and some snacks,
and we were going.
She showed up as like, where's the party?
Well, that's sort of what happened.
We were going up in the front of the building,
and she was shooting New Adventures of Old Christine
right there at the entrance.
And we literally walked by her, and they were like,
putting on her makeup like right in front of,
they were right about to go.
And she said, who are those guys?
I want to go with them.
Where are you guys going?
And of course we were like, come on up.
That's cool.
And then an electrician knocked on her door
and asked to put a light in his apartment,
shining out the window.
How much did you charge him?
No, we didn't.
We were just like, come on in.
Oh, that's nice.
And then Erica Strada showed up and arrested you.
All right, so where are we here?
So I'll tell you where we left off, Chuck.
We left off with continuing resolutions.
Temporary funding.
Yeah, eventually, if a position is contentious enough
about some part of the budget.
Right.
And very rarely is it something financial necessarily.
Like it has to do with finances, because it's in the budget.
But typically it's something more political than that.
Like the idea of Medicaid funding abortions.
In 1977 and 1978, impasses were reached where they could not
come to an agreement on using Medicaid to fund abortions,
federal dollars to fund abortions.
That's right.
Very contentious issue.
Yes, it had to do with money.
It had to do with finances, Medicaid funding.
But really it was about the social issue,
this cultural issue, abortion.
That's usually the kind of political impasse or divide
that it takes to really reach a point where one side says,
you know, I don't even agree to this continuing resolution anymore.
Just forget it.
We're done.
Yeah, it seems like it's usually something
that is so important to that either president or party
or both, that they feel like it's worth digging in.
And a lot of times that has to do,
sometimes that has to do with the thing itself.
But sometimes it has to do with the perception
of that thing to your voting base.
Sure, that's part of it too.
But I mean, we're talking politicians here.
I think you could have just said the last part.
You know?
That's true.
So what happens when they fail the pass that appropriations
bill and they're not talking, you're
going to get a funding gap.
And that doesn't necessarily lead to a shutdown either.
Can we please get to the shutdown?
Well, since 1981, more than half of the funding gaps
lasted just a few days when I talked
about solving it over the weekend.
A lot of times that will happen over the weekend.
And if it's less than a few days, that
means no one had to sit out work or whatever.
It was furloughed.
Right.
So technically, the government was shut down,
but no one noticed because it happened on days
when the federal government isn't open anyway.
Yeah, and until 1981, they were actually
allowed to keep operating.
But the Reagan administration changed all that.
Yeah, what was the name?
Benjamin Civilleti?
Civilleti?
Technically, in Italian, it'd be c'i,
because a c followed by a vowel makes a c'i sound.
Did you know that?
I do.
And I don't remember this guy.
I don't either.
I mean, we were young and probably too young
to really know about attorney general.
Young and reckless.
Like I knew the president and the vice president.
Sure.
And maybe the speaker of the house or something.
First attorney general I was cognizant of was Ebon Mies.
Wasn't he?
Or was he state?
I don't even know.
He was the first cabinet member I was aware of, Ebon Mies.
Yeah, I know Ed Mies.
Because I think they made foam in Mad Magazine.
It showed him getting hit by a mousetrap or something
because he was a Mies.
That's kind of how I was exposed to politics, too.
Mad?
I think so.
Sure, yeah.
I knew all about Spiro Agnew, even though I
had no idea who he was.
I still don't really know who he was.
There's this great Simpsons quote
where Millhouse and Barter looking at a Mad Magazine,
they're like, they're making fun of that Spiro Agnew guy
again.
He must work there or something.
And I remember thinking like, I guess Spiro Agnew works there.
Because they used to skewer the publisher, too.
So I just thought Spiro Agnew was one of them.
I think it's a funny name, too, in comedy circles.
That's a good one.
Yes, attorney general Benjamin Cibilletti.
He was Reagan's AG, and he said it is not constitutional
to keep spending money without congressional approval, which
is what's happening when you say, well, go ahead
and keep working federal government.
I mean, they kind of made shutdowns happen.
Yeah, it was like, OK, we're shut down, ha, ha.
We're still just continuing on normal until Cibilletti said,
well, remember that anti-deficiency act?
That's actually for real.
And I saw somewhere that they actually enforced that.
And federal agencies are frequently
fined for violating these things, like going into contracts
or hiring people when they don't really have the money for it.
And I saw somewhere the SEC got an $800 million fine once for it.
Couldn't find it anywhere else.
But it was a spectacular enough number to at least mention it.
So Cibilletti really changed the rules for shutdowns.
Because before, if the government shut down,
but the government still functioned,
it was almost more of like a, what's
the word I'm looking for, ceremonial kind of thing.
I know what you mean.
Didn't really mean anything.
It was symbolic.
Symbolic, yes.
Once Cibilletti said, no, no, no, we actually
can't stay open during a shutdown,
that made the whole thing way more politically risky.
And so they stopped happening nearly as frequently
from that point on.
That's right.
Things have changed since then.
Tremendously.
And there have been four times, and sort of recently,
where people really dug in, and there
were what we would call major shutdowns.
The winter of 9596, there were two shutdowns
because of Bill Clinton being a Democrat,
and Newt Gingrich hating his guts.
He was the House Speaker at the time,
and the Republican-controlled Congress.
And Newt was all about the contract for America, which
basically was small government, lowering taxes.
Really sticking it to the poor.
Yeah, like really higher restrictions on,
or more strict restrictions on welfare recipients.
So he and Bill Clinton went at it for a long time.
They really did.
And I mean, each side was dug in.
And Gingrich was trying to shove that contract with America
down Clinton's throat, which is not what Clinton's policies were.
And Clinton said, no, and neither side would give.
And finally, and this is how shutdowns usually get resolved,
they start doing polls of the American public,
and say, who do you blame for this?
And almost invariably, the public says, Congress,
this is Congress's fault that the country is just
being weakened right now by this government shutdown,
and then Congress relents.
And that's what happened.
For those two, both of the shutdowns
were a combined 26 days.
And Republicans in the Congress were
to blame according to American people,
and polling numbers at least.
So they said, sorry.
Fine, fine.
We'll try to get you impeached instead.
Should we talk about 2013?
Yeah, I remember this one really clearly.
That's right.
President Barack Obama, Republicans in Congress
again, Ted Cruz.
Like almost single-handedly shut the government down,
if I remember it correctly.
Yeah, he passed a bill that Republicans
were very upset about the Affordable Care Act.
And he did all he could to defund that, basically
defund what was later to be known as Obamacare.
And he was leading a kind of a rogue faction of Tea Party
Republicans, because John Boehner was the speaker
at the time, and he was a traditional conservative
Republican.
And I believe he was on board to just, at least
with continuing resolutions, to keep the negotiations going.
And I remember Ted Cruz just being like, nope,
I'm shutting the government down.
And it was a ballsy move.
I'll tell you that.
That's right.
And that lasted 16 days.
800,000 federal workers were furloughed,
which we'll talk about what that means here in a minute.
But again, public polling and public outcry
was against the Republicans at the time.
And they said, all right, we'll pass a CR.
And let's change some things about the Affordable Care Act,
but we will pass a CR.
Right.
They basically got some minor changes, I think.
A big one, the biggest concession they got
was that there would be income verification for people who
were applying for Obamacare.
That's right.
We should talk about the most recent shutdown as well.
2018, 19.
I remember this one, too, like it was yesterday.
Basically, it was yesterday.
And this was, obviously, when Donald Trump said,
I want a border wall, and I want $5 billion
to get this thing going.
And Democrats said, no, you're not.
And they had a meeting on TV, which was really weird.
Oh, so weird.
And Chuck Schumer tricked Donald Trump
into taking responsibility for the shutdown.
Did Schumer do it?
I thought he just out of nowhere asserted it.
I thought I remembered Schumer sort of tricking him
in the room into sort of claiming ownership, almost
like a dare, and Trump was sort of like, yeah,
it's my shutdown because this is important.
And you could see Schumer kind of laughing like, oh,
I don't think he even understands what he just said.
Yeah, I'm sure the Republicans were like,
I can't believe you just said that.
That's right.
And there was a partial shutdown on December 22
that ran for a historically long 35 days.
Yeah, the previous one in 2013 was 16 days.
The previous record was the 95-96 ones combined for 26 days.
Yeah, those are two.
This was 35 days.
Over Christmas and New Year's, which was a tough time
to do that.
Yeah, it was because, again, the deadline is October 1.
So they had created continuing resolutions
from October 1 or September 30 on to December 22.
And then finally, on December 22,
I remember this, Trump had been signaling
that he was willing to give and, I guess, at least keep
negotiating continuing resolutions.
And Ann Coulter expressed on Trump's behalf
that he would not be giving on this position
and that the government shutdown would go on.
Ann Coulter basically single-handedly forced
this government shutdown because she said,
if you give on this, we're done.
I will vote against you at the polls
and make sure everybody else does.
And that's when Trump's will was bolstered tremendously.
And that's when the government shutdown happened.
That's right.
You want to take a break?
Yeah.
How many people are still listening to this, do you think?
Roughly 70%.
We'll be right back.
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We are, we are, we are, we are, we are, we are, we are, we are, we are.
OK, Chuck, so, um.
Well, we should, we left a cliffhanger.
The government was shut down when we left.
Oh, yeah, it came back.
It came back.
After how long again?
35 days later, on January 25th, uh, Trump called off that
shutdown without that funding for the border wall, again,
because public perception, uh, was swayed not in his favor.
Right, which is rare.
Again, every single one of these shutdowns, everyone said it
was Congress's fault.
With this one, they said it was the president's fault.
Surely that, at least partially, had to do with him claiming
on TV that it was his responsibility for shutting down
the government.
This one, though, because I remember, and it gets so just
childlike and snippy, but with the tweets from both sides, calling
it the Trump shutdown, Trump calling it the Schumer Pelosi
shutdown, uh, trying to hashtag these things, see what's trending.
It's all just so ridiculous.
It is.
Twitter.
Uy.
So, um, the shutdown ended, and like you said, Trump didn't get that
five billion dollars for the wall.
I think they ultimately added like 1.6 billion for border security,
but nothing specifically for that wall.
Right, and the Democrats started saying, well, like, let's really
define wall.
Right, yeah, I remember that.
But what people like to point out is not only did Trump not get that
five billion dollars, but America lost at least 11 billion dollars,
yeah.
Right?
During this shutdown.
Yeah, income.
Right.
So, there's a real economic cost to government shutdowns.
Basically, everyone, I don't care whether you're a Republican
stuff you should know listener, a Democrat stuff you should know
listener, an anarchist stuff you should know listener, a centrist stuff you
should know listener, doesn't matter.
You should be really mad at your government whenever there's a shutdown.
That's right.
Because it is holding people's jobs hostage.
Yes.
Millions of people depend directly on the federal government for their
paycheck and during a shutdown, you don't get a paycheck.
Some people even have to work, but the people who don't have to work, not
only don't get a paycheck, they will never get that money for the work
that they missed against their own will during that shutdown.
Yeah, like, you can apply for back pay.
Is that right?
No.
You can't?
No.
For who?
No one can?
No.
If you worked during the shutdown, you can get retroactive pay.
Oh.
So you just had to approve it, but you had to have been working.
It had to have been an essential job.
So you can't get back pay for furloughed time?
No.
Okay.
It's just gone forever.
So people who were out of work, who were federal workers, I think about
800,000 of them during the 2018-19 shutdown, the Trump, Schumer, Pelosi
shutdown, they went without pay for 35 days.
Yeah, 380,000 of the 800,000 federal workers actually had to stop working.
That's almost every bit of NASA, HUD, Housing, Urban Development staff, 80% of National
Park Service, 50,000 workers at the IRS, and then the other 420,000 that they deemed essential,
they still worked, and I believe they're the ones that could apply, but they aren't guaranteed
that money though, right?
No.
Again, Congress has to vote.
Right.
Usually as part of a shutdown, just to kind of like get public perception in Congress's
favor, Congress will hold a vote, and almost nearly, almost every time, nearly unanimously
they'll pay the people for retroactive pay when this thing's over.
The problem is, is again, those people who aren't working during that time, whose jobs
are deemed non-essential, they'll never get that money.
They just don't get it.
And that, I mean, if you project it to your future retirement, like that's money that
you're not investing, you're not buying things with it, so you're not helping the American
economy.
Especially during the holidays, this last time.
Yeah, you're not investing in the stock market, you're not taking care of your retirement,
so it has these ripple effects that last months and years.
So just to get a little bit back to the nuts and bolts of all this, it's not like every
time there's a government shutdown, the same agency, the same people are affected in exactly
the same way.
Right.
And because, do you remember how there's 12 different appropriations bills that have to
go to the president?
Some of those can be passed and signed before the shutdown ever happened.
If that happens and your agency was in one of those appropriations bills, it's like every
other Tuesday or Wednesday for you during the shutdown.
Right, but you can straddle those agencies and they can be split and that can get weird.
A good example of it getting weird is when this past one happened, the Coast Guard, which
falls under the Homeland Security slice of the pie, the Homeland Security hadn't been
funded yet, so the Coast Guard had to keep its operations going without pay while the
rest of the military, the other four branches, were just operating as normally because the
defense appropriations bill had already been passed before the shutdown.
So depending on which bills have already been passed, some groups are working, some
groups aren't.
And even in each agency where the funding hasn't been appropriated for this coming year, there
will be some people who will be working and others who aren't.
And it's up to each agency during a shutdown to say, this is how we're going to function
during this.
This is the jobs that have to be carried out, whether the government's open or not.
And these are the people who can be sent home without any hopes of ever getting paid.
Yeah.
Like, A, you see the thing coming.
So it's not like a big surprise, but B, you have this sort of plan already in place.
It's called, you submit it actually to the Office of Management and Budget and you coordinate
with them, rather, and that's where, you know, you got to lay out your plan.
They know it's coming and so they got to plan accordingly and like, I remember, I have
friends that worked for the federal government, the CDC and places like that.
And you know, they watch this stuff really closely and some of them were furloughed and
you know, went 35 days without a paycheck.
Right.
And so there's that personal level where you missed rent that month.
I can't remember who was it, Wilbur Ross?
One of the cabinet members was like, go, you know, go take up a craft or a hobby and turn
that into like money to pay your rent or just something, some unsolicited advice that no
one wanted to hear.
It was not welcome.
Yeah.
So.
Get on Etsy.
If you are in that position, like yes, you missed rent, you missed your car payment,
you missed like all sorts of stuff.
Even if you're not a federal employee, you're still probably affected in one way or another
and the longer that a shutdown goes on, the more and more people are affected.
Everybody from people who are trying to get their passport application pushed through
to people who are supplemental nutrition program recipients, welfare recipients, food stamps,
children's morning breakfast programs, like all these things start to run out of funding
and they get affected and more and more people start to be directly impacted by these shutdowns
the longer they go on.
Sure.
The FDA food inspections can be curtailed and in fact, during long shutdowns, there are
safety experts that say you might want to steer clear of fresh food right now.
Yeah.
Don't eat like that bag of romaine lettuce, especially if you're pregnant or something.
Or let me see the National Park Service.
This was a big one during the last shutdown, but I think they, some parks were closed all
together.
That's how they did it in 2013.
Yeah.
That was a big one.
They lost $6 million a day and lost revenue for the National Park Service, but this most
recent when some of them were shut down, some of them were kept open, but not staffed.
So very famously there was, I think it was at Joshua Tree where they damaged, like irreparable
damage to some of the Joshua Trees.
Somebody cut down at least one Joshua Tree, which takes centuries to grow so that they
could drive their off-road vehicle in an area where you're not supposed to drive an off-road
vehicle so they could get to it.
Somebody cut down a Joshua Tree and that became kind of symbolic for that last shutdown.
Yeah.
I mean, there's a range of problems that range from inconveniences to not getting paid,
but you know, imagine coming from another country and planning this thing for a year.
You put all this money into a trip to come see the greatest places in the United States.
Sure.
You know, I'm from wherever.
I'm German.
Germany.
I was going to say Germany.
And I want to go see the most beautiful things in America.
I want to go to the Grand Canyon in Yellowstone and I've had this trip paid for and planned
and it's not refundable.
Right.
What do you mean Mount Rushmore is closed?
I can see it right there.
It's closed.
A little bit.
Yeah.
Sorry, Franz.
Sorry.
Go see, I don't know.
What else is around there?
Not much.
No, there's nothing.
That's kind of the point.
Yeah.
Go see Van Nostrand's childhood birthplace.
Right.
And again, these are seemingly like, if you ask the federal government, they're like,
who cares about that minor inconvenience?
Well, there was one thing that I came across that I found particularly scummy, Chuck.
During government shutdowns when other people who are working are not getting paychecks.
Oh yeah.
Here we go.
Some Congress people still get theirs.
All Congress people do, but some have the wherewithal to be like, eh, I'm not taking
any pay during this shutdown.
Right.
Like maybe I'll get a retroactively, that's fine, but you just hang on to my paycheck.
Other Congress people are like, yeah, keep the money coming.
I need it.
Which is, that's super scummy to me.
Other people are out of work or working and not getting paid.
Like the TSA famously had to work and whether they wanted to or not and they didn't get
paid.
Or they're calling in sick.
They should, yeah.
They should not be, Congress should not be getting a paycheck during that time.
Because it's Congress' fault.
I know.
I think they said that TSA employees about 10% at one point were calling in sick every
day after a little while.
You remember that?
Yeah.
It was not a good time to travel.
And that's an inconvenience.
People flying.
Yep.
Taken longer.
When's the next one coming, Chuck?
That's what everyone wants to know.
October 2nd?
We'll keep an ear out for it.
In the meantime, now you know everything there is to know about government shutdowns.
There's more little interesting details, but if you want to know about them, you can be
a saucy boy or girl and look it up on the internet.
And since I said saucy, it's time for Listener Mail.
We have a couple of corrections.
We haven't done these in a while.
We haven't made mistakes in years.
These are both yours, not the pile on.
Hey guys, I want to point out that Donald Trump spoke to the prime minister of Sweden,
Stefan Löfvin, about the arrest of A$AP Rocky, not the king.
Yeah.
I was really making a lot of noise about that over here because I got it wrong.
And he said, I would not have even sent this email if Josh hadn't finished that story with,
this is reality, what I just said is actual facts.
That was close enough.
Yeah.
It was just a slip of the tongue.
Facts of the lower case F.
And that is from Hampus Bovjerg.
What?
Let's try that again.
Hampus Bovjerg.
Let me see.
There's a lot of consonants in there.
I'm sure some of those are quite silent.
Wow, I think you nailed it.
But you forgot the grip.
Is that his last name?
I think Bovjerg is the middle name of Hampus.
So Hampus Grip.
And I love that he put Swede in parentheses as if I had to see that.
And then the other one was a math thing, and I'm kind of curious about this one.
Nuclear semiotics, Josh said 9,000 seconds is 446 days.
He said it's 104 days.
And he said, I don't know, you guys are busy in recording and performing calculations.
He said, but I'm really curious just where that number came from.
He said, because no combination of multiplying, dividing 9 million by 60 or 24 yield 466.
And I'm really just curious.
You guys do a great job.
Thanks for everything.
Joey Russo.
Thanks, Joey.
I think that that number was where Mike Battham and Siri got together and had a baby.
That's where I think that 446 came from.
Gotcha.
And right after you said that, I went, uh-huh, that's right.
So I'm equally to blame.
Thank you, Chuck, for taking that for the team.
Sure.
Team Josh.
If you want to get in touch with us to let us know what kind of mistakes I've been making
left and right and Chuck's been abiding, we love that stuff.
Love it.
Can't get enough of it.
So get in touch with us.
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On the podcast, hey dude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor, stars of the
cult classic show, hey dude, bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker necklaces.
We're going to use hey dude as our jumping off point, but we are going to unpack and
dive back into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it.
And now we're calling on all of our friends to come back and relive it.
Listen to hey dude, the 90s called on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get
your podcasts.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you listen to podcasts.