What shutdown? Frustrated voters shrug as pols point fingers
NEW YORK — What if they shut down the government and no one cared?
On the ground in communities across America, many voters barely noticed the latest spasm of dysfunction in Washington. Those who did were angry and frustrated with their elected leaders but were also growing numb to the near-constant crises that have dominated the Donald Trump-era politics. Few expected last weekend’s 69-hour government shutdown to have any significant impact on the high-stakes midterm elections in November — a political reality that may make another shutdown more likely.
“I saw absolutely nothing in my life that indicated the government had shut down other than the headlines in the paper,” said Florida attorney John Grant, a 74-year-old former Republican state senator. “To me, the government shutdown was a nonevent. The whole thing is a joke.”
For the vast majority of America, there was no noticeable effect as Congress failed to enact a spending bill late Friday, effectively closing the federal government through Monday evening.