First missed federal payday as shutdown hits day 10; 600k furloughed, many work without pay
On day 10 of the partial government shutdown (Oct. 10), the first federal paychecks were missed — more than 600,000 federal workers are furloughed and many more are working without pay, with active-duty military facing missed paychecks if the impasse continues. The lapse followed Senate defeats of competing stopgap bills after the House passed a GOP short-term continuing resolution that included roughly $88 million in added security funding; Democrats have refused to back a “clean” CR without extending ACA marketplace subsidies and rolling back recent Medicaid changes, and analysts warn the shutdown costs about $400 million a day in federal pay while the White House and OMB have signaled possible layoffs.
📌 Key Facts
- The House passed a short-term continuing resolution on Sept. 19 to extend government funding through Nov. 21, 2025.
- The Senate failed to advance the House GOP CR and blocked the Democrats' competing proposal; neither measure secured the 60 votes needed, and appropriations lapsed — triggering a partial shutdown that began Oct. 1, 2025.
- The impasse centered on policy demands: Democrats insisted the stopgap include a permanent extension of enhanced ACA marketplace subsidies and rollbacks of recent Medicaid cuts, while House Republicans pressed for a 'clean' CR and rejected those demands; formal negotiations collapsed and planned high-level meetings were canceled.
- The House CR included roughly $88 million for increased security in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s killing — about $30 million for member security (via the Capitol Police mutual‑aid fund) and $58 million for executive and judicial branch protection.
- The Congressional Budget Office estimated roughly 750,000 federal employees could be furloughed each day in a shutdown, with a daily compensation cost of about $400 million (estimates that accumulated to roughly $1.2 billion by the third day).
- On Oct. 10 (day 10 of the lapse) federal civilian employees experienced the first missed federal payday: more than 600,000 workers were furloughed and roughly three times that number were working without pay; active‑duty military were also at risk of missing their next paychecks if no deal was reached.
- The Office of Management and Budget issued shutdown guidance to agencies while OMB Director Russell Vought and the administration signaled aggressive fiscal moves — including an announced plan not to spend nearly $5 billion in congressionally authorized foreign aid (a so‑called 'pocket rescission') and warnings about potential reductions‑in‑force and withheld back pay — actions that prompted legal and political pushback (the GAO has deemed pocket rescissions unlawful).
- Timing and politics intensified pressure on talks: both parties publicly blamed the other (with Trump and GOP leaders urging unity behind the House CR and Democrats saying Republicans would 'own' a shutdown), and scheduled recesses for Rosh Hashanah/Yom Kippur and other calendar constraints left only a few working days to resolve the impasse.
📚 Contextual Background
- OMB is the abbreviation for the Office of Management and Budget, an office within the executive branch of the United States federal government responsible for assisting the President in preparing the federal budget and supervising its administration in executive agencies.
- Russell Vought served as the Director (chief) of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).
📊 Analysis & Commentary (3)
"The piece examines Chuck Schumer’s strategy after the Senate blocked the House stopgap, weighing whether Democrats can extract policy concessions or risk a shutdown blame game."
"The Slow Boring piece is an opinion‑driven, pragmatic take on the unfolding government shutdown that analyzes its economic and political costs (citing furlough risks and program interruptions), argues Democrats should defend key priorities (like ACA premium tax credits) and use visible harms as leverage, and offers tactical advice on messaging and strategy rather than pure moralizing."
"A Playbook deep‑dive warning that the partial government shutdown will produce widespread, tangible harms — from furloughed workers and delayed health and nutrition programs to interrupted economic data and national‑security monitoring — and that political brinkmanship plus executive funding holds risk turning temporary pain into lasting policy change."
📰 Sources (38)
- Confirms the Senate’s weekend adjournment through Tuesday, increasing likelihood that military pay will be missed due to a Monday payroll processing deadline.
- Notes continued background talks but no formal negotiations on ACA subsidies yet.
- Oct. 10 marked the first missed federal payday of the shutdown, affecting hundreds of thousands of workers.
- More than 600,000 federal workers are furloughed; about triple that number are working without pay, per the report.
- Active-duty military are expected to miss their first paycheck next week absent a deal.
- Sen. Thom Tillis said most constituents “aren’t paying much attention right now,” underscoring limited immediate public salience.
- Article highlights worker fears over threats by President Trump and OMB Director Russell Vought to use the shutdown to lay off workers or deny some back pay.
- Fox cites the same CBO estimate and frames the accumulated payout as roughly $1.2 billion 'as of Friday' (3 days × $400M/day).
- Direct quotes from Sen. Joni Ernst (R‑Iowa) characterizing the funding lapse as 'Schumer’s Shutdown Shenanigans' and calling for the government to reopen.
- Quote from White House spokesman Kush Desai reiterating the administration’s framing: 'Democrats are burning $400 million a day to pay federal workers not to work.'
- Identifies the next federal civilian pay date as Oct. 10 and the next military pay date as Oct. 15
- Quotes Heritage Foundation budget expert Richard Stern explaining those dates could accelerate pressure to end the shutdown
- Includes on‑record comments from Rep. Shri Thanedar and reporter Rachel Bade underscoring political fallout and public sentiment
- U.S. Senate adjourned for the weekend, extending the shutdown into next week.
- Framing of the standoff: Democrats are holding out for Republicans to make health‑care concessions to their spending bill.
- On-the-ground concern: 'thousands of federal workers' worrying about paychecks and potential mass layoffs (as reported by PBS correspondent Liz Landers).
- Contextual analysis stressing that shutdowns historically have limited economic damage but that this shutdown is riskier because of explicit White House/OMB threats to permanently eliminate positions (a 'reduction in force').
- Direct on‑the‑record quote attributed to President Trump about laying off federal employees and the partisan framing of that threat.
- Named-commentary from independent economists and market strategists (Ed Yardeni, Scott Helfstein of Global X) framing market complacency and likely recovery dynamics.
- Reiterates and frames the CBO furlough/pay estimates alongside the EY‑Parthenon macro estimate, highlighting $400M/day federal pay obligation for furloughed employees
- Links the economic estimates to current White House/OMB actions (project funding freezes and RIF warnings), making a bridge between fiscal estimates and administrative policy responses
- Senate leadership will not bring votes to the floor again until Friday (Senate observing Yom Kippur), delaying immediate resolution votes.
- President Trump posted on Truth Social urging Republicans to 'clear out dead wood,' framing the shutdown as an opportunity to cut waste.
- OMB Director Russ Vought reportedly told House Republicans that reductions‑in‑force (layoffs) could begin within two days after the shutdown began.
- SSA-specific furlough projection: roughly 6,000 SSA employees expected to be furloughed out of nearly 52,000
- FAA-specific figures: about 11,300 FAA employees furloughed out of nearly 45,000; NATCA cites 2,350+ workers (aircraft certification/aerospace engineers) among those affected
- Concrete operational impacts: SSA day-to-day services (benefit verifications, earnings record corrections, Medicare card replacement) may be disrupted; FAA rulemaking and routine personnel security background investigations will stop; air traffic controllers are essential and will work with deferred pay
- Provides historical context on shutdown lengths, noting 20 funding gaps since 1976 and that the 2018–2019 shutdown lasted 35 days (Dec. 22, 2018–Jan. 25, 2019).
- Cites a Congressional Budget Office estimate that the 2018–2019 shutdown cost about $3 billion in lost GDP.
- Notes Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget data: since 1981 there were 10 funding gaps of three days or fewer and only a handful lasting more than two weeks.
- Specific Senate roll-call blocking the GOP continuing resolution: 53–45 vote
- Names of three senators who crossed party lines previously (Cortez Masto, Angus King, John Fetterman) and note they did not change position in this vote
- Direct quotes from Schumer and Thune attributing blame and pressing for defections
- OMB sent a shutdown memo to agencies Tuesday evening instructing orderly shutdown activities (timing detail).
- Article cites a 2019 law that guarantees furloughed federal employees will receive retroactive pay once operations resume.
- Explicit clarification that the U.S. Postal Service is unaffected by the shutdown (funded by revenues, not appropriations).
- Direct quote from President Trump warning of "irreversible" actions that could increase shutdown pain.
- Direct quotes and framing from Vice President JD Vance blaming Senate Democrats for 'taking the government hostage' and saying he would meet with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer only after the shutdown ends.
- Vance's characterization that Democrats shut the government over benefits that 'don't even expire for another few months' and his specific admonition that Democrats should negotiate rather than shut down the government.
- Reiteration of CBO furlough and daily-cost figures in the context of Vance's comments and noting immediate impacts on TSA, air-traffic controllers and military pay.
- Direct contemporaneous reporting confirming the shutdown has begun (Oct. 1, 2025) and reiterating the ~750,000 furlough estimate in the context of the actual lapse.
- Direct quote from President Donald Trump warning he may take 'irreversible' retaliatory actions.
- Attribution to named budget/think-tank expert (Rachel Snyderman) framing the economic and social costs of a shutdown.
- CBO estimate that roughly 750,000 federal employees could be furloughed each day of a shutdown.
- CBO estimate that the total daily cost of their compensation would be roughly $400 million.
- The figures are drawn from CBO analysis of agencies' latest contingency plans and OPM data, released Sept. 30, 2025.
- Sen. Joni Ernst sent a letter to CBO Director Phillip Swagel requesting a detailed, sweeping analysis of the operational and economic impacts of a potential partial government shutdown.
- Ernst asked the CBO to quantify effects including back pay for furloughed non‑essential employees, military pay, congressional pay, impacts on private businesses (loans/permits/certifications), costs from lapsed procurements/contracts, and potential state vs. federal responsibilities for keeping national parks open.
- Fox cites the CBO's January 2019 shutdown analysis showing roughly $18 billion in delayed federal spending, an $8 billion dip in Q1 GDP that year, and about $3 billion of spending unlikely to be recovered.
- President Trump canceled a Thursday meeting with Democratic leaders to discuss a funding deal, a move NPR says increases the odds of a shutdown.
- NPR quotes House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries summarizing Democrats' position ('cancel the cuts, lower the costs, save health care').
- NPR reports Republicans pressing for a seven‑week funding bill without attached policy changes and notes Trump’s social‑media post calling Democrats' demands 'unserious.'
- President Trump canceled a planned meeting with Democratic leaders Hakeem Jeffries and Chuck Schumer on funding talks.
- Jeffries called Trump’s remarks 'unhinged' and said Democrats won’t back the GOP bill, arguing it 'guts' health care and pushing for enhanced ACA subsidies.
- Schumer said it was 'tantrum day' for Trump and urged the president to get negotiators in a room to reach a deal.
- Article reiterates the House-passed short-term CR would extend current funding levels to Nov. 21 and warns of a shutdown if the Senate does not act by Sept. 30.
- Sen. John Thune says he intends to bring the House-passed GOP CR back to the Senate floor and use the deadline to pressure Democrats.
- Both chambers have left Washington until Sept. 29, leaving only two working days before the Sept. 30 deadline, per the report.
- Fox News reports Speaker Mike Johnson announced the House would not return until after the funding deadline.
- Additional specifics on Democrats’ counterproposal: a permanent extension of ACA premium subsidies, clawbacks of canceled NPR/PBS funding, and repeal of Trump’s recent health-law changes (reversing ~$1T in Medicaid cuts and eliminating a $50B rural hospital fund).
- New on-the-record rhetoric: Thune calls Democrats’ approach a 'cold-blooded partisan' attempt; Sen. Chris Murphy alleges Republicans are planning a shutdown.
- Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries sent a Saturday letter demanding a meeting with President Trump over the funding impasse.
- Their letter argues GOP leaders have refused bipartisan negotiations and says Republicans would bear responsibility for a shutdown.
- Speaker Mike Johnson said he is open to meeting with top Democrats but claimed 'there isn't much to discuss' and that Democrats would 'own' a shutdown if they oppose the House stopgap.
+ 18 more sources