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Two Cheers for a Semi-Normal Appropriations Process – Philip Wallach

Is it too kind to give any cheers at all to Congress’ appropriators during the second government shutdown of this fiscal year? Should we need to congratulate our legislators for the simple achievement of keeping the lights on—when they haven’t even managed that?

Well, in this 119th Congress, we are grading on a curve. Just a few months ago, it seemed Congress might lose hold of the government’s purse strings entirely. Relations between Republicans and Democrats were so strained that Capitol Hill’s powerful third party—the appropriators—seemed unlikely to be able to broker an acceptable deal. Failure would have invited the White House to implement its spending preferences for fiscal year 2026 by fiat. Russell Vought, director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), explicitly wished for a “less bipartisan” appropriations process. More than that, one could infer that he hoped the normal appropriations process would crash and burn, and his implementation of a controversial “pocket rescission” in August 2025 attempted to ensure that it would. 

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