The government has shut down a
total of 18 times since Congress introduced the Congressional Budget
and Impoundment Control Act, which established the federal budget
process in 1976. Half of those shutdowns occurred over a weekend.
"I call them 'fake shutdowns,'" Marc Goldwein, senior
policy director of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget – a
bipartisan, nonprofit organization that educates the public on fiscal
policy issues – told Fox News. “Most shutdowns occur over the course of a
weekend. We’re talking days or weeks – not months.”
But there has been a handful of lengthy government shutdowns in the history of the U.S. According to
data from the Congressional Research Service (CRS), six shutdowns in the past four decades lasted more than 10 days.
However, Goldwein says, only three of those shutdowns are significant.
Two occurred during the Clinton administration in the
winter of 1995 to 1996 when former President Bill Clinton and the
Republican Congress were at odds and shut the government down for a
total of 26 days, Goldwein said.
The third occurred during the Obama administration in 2013. A stalemate between the House and Senate led to a 16-day hiatus.
Here’s a look back at every government shutdown in the history of the U.S.
President Gerald Ford
When: Thursday, Sept. 30 to Monday, Oct. 10, 1976
Duration: 10 days
The first partial shutdown occurred under Gerald Ford’s
presidency when Ford vetoed a $56 billion spending bill for the
Departments of Labor and Health, Education and Welfare, according to a
1976
report from The New York Times.
This was the year the Congressional Budget and
Impoundment Control Act became law, allowing Congress to take an
extension, known as a continuing resolution (CR).
President Jimmy Carter
When: Friday, Sept. 30 to Thursday, Oct. 13, 1977
Duration: 12 days
When: Monday, Oct. 31 to Wednesday, Nov. 9, 1977
Duration: 8 days
When: Wednesday, Nov. 30 to Friday, Dec. 9, 1977
Duration: 8 days
There were three shutdowns, referred to as the
"abortion shutdowns," in the late 1970s under the presidency of Jimmy
Carter. The Democratic party may have dominated both the House and the
Senate, but they couldn't get Republicans on board when it came to using
Medicaid to pay for abortions.
When: Saturday, Sept. 30 to Wednesday, Oct. 18, 1978
Duration: 17 days
In 1978,
Carter
vetoed a $37 billion defense authorization bill, which included a $2
billion nuclear-powered Nimitz-class aircraft carrier -- equipment he
didn't consider essential to national security,
The Washington Post reported. This led to the second largest shutdown in the history of the nation.
When: Sunday, Sept. 30 to Friday, Oct. 12, 1979
Duration: 11 days
Another funding gap took place a year later when the
House and Senate disagreed over raising pay by 5.5 percent for members
of Congress and senior civil servants, The Washington Post reported. And
there was yet again another debate over abortion funding.
President Ronald Reagan
When: Friday, Nov. 20 to Monday, Nov. 23, 1981
Duration: 2 days
President Ronald Reagan vetoed a spending bill because it didn't make enough cuts.
When: Thursday, Sept. 30 to Saturday, Oct. 2, 1982
Duration: 1 day
The government shut down for one day when Congress failed to pass the spending bill on time.
When: Friday, Dec. 17 to Tuesday, Dec., 21, 1982
Duration: 3 days
Both the House and Senate wanted to increase public
works spending in order to create more jobs -- a move Reagan opposed.
The House also opposed MX missile funding, which, The Washington Post
noted, was a "major defense priority" of Reagan's.
When: Thursday, Nov. 10 to Monday, Nov. 14, 1983
Duration: 3 days
Reagan argued over the Democratic-controlled House's
proposed foreign aid and spending cuts and their plea for an increase in
funding for education. At the same time, Reagan was pushing for more
funding for the MX missile.
Eventually, both parties reached an agreement.
When: Sunday, Sept. 30 to Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1984
Duration: 2 days
In short, Reagan agreed to the House's proposed crime-fighting package, but he opposed their water projects package.
"Reagan offered to forgo his crime bill in exchange for
junking the water package...but a deal wasn't reached in time to avoid a
brief shutdown," The Washington Post reported.
When: Wednesday, Oct. 3 to Friday, Oct. 5, 1984
Duration: 1 day
Lawmakers reportedly needed another day to discuss the spending bill.
When: Thursday, Oct. 16 to Saturday, Oct. 18, 1986
Duration: 1 day
The Democratic-controlled House was once again in
disagreement with Reagan and the Republican-controlled Senate. This
time, over a welfare package deal.
When: Friday, Dec. 18 to Sunday, Dec. 20, 1987
Duration: 1 day
Reagan and Democrats couldn't agree on funding for
Nicaraguan "Contra" militants. Democrats also pushed to reinstate the
"Fairness Doctrine," which required licensed broadcasters to give equal
air time for people with competing political points of view.
President George H.W. Bush
When: Friday, Oct. 5 to Tuesday, Oct. 9, 1990
Duration: 3 days
Only one shutdown took place during George H.W. Bush’s
presidency. It occurred in October 1990 after Bush vetoed a stopgap
spending bill,
The New York Times reported at the time.
But the timing was right. The shutdown happened over
Columbus Day weekend and most federal workers were already off for the
holiday.
President Bill Clinton
When: Monday, Nov. 13 to Sunday, Nov. 19, 1995
Duration: 5 days
President Bill Clinton vetoed a continuing resolution in November 1995 over Medicare premium increases.
"The government is partially shutting down because
Congress has failed to pass the straightforward legislation necessary to
keep the government running without imposing sharp hikes in Medicare
premiums and deep cuts in education and the environment," Clinton said
during an
address on Nov. 14, 1995.
When: Friday, Dec. 15, 1995, to Saturday, Jan. 6, 1996
Duration: 21 days
It's the longest shutdown in U.S. history: 21 days.
The government shut down after Clinton vetoed the spending bill proposed by the Republican-controlled Congress.
After a long 22 days, the president and Congress agreed
to a seven year budget plan, which included "modest spending cuts and
tax increases,"
according to research by the Regional Oral History Office at the University of California, Berkeley.
President Barack Obama
When: Monday, Sept. 30 to Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013
Duration: 16 days
Seventeen years later,
the government shut down once again. Lawmakers couldn't seem to come to an agreement on the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, in 2013.
The House passed several versions of the bill to fund the government. But each time, the Senate sent it back.
“This is an unnecessary blow to America,” Harry Reid, the Senate democratic leader at the time, said of the shutdown.
John Boehner, the House speaker during the shutdown,
said Republicans were fighting to keep the government open, but the
Senate "continued to reject our offers.”