Day: October 17, 2025
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- The US government shutdown has resulted in the furlough of approximately 900,000 federal workers.
- Congress is deadlocked over budget issues, particularly Affordable Care Act subsidy cuts.
- The ongoing shutdown is already the fourth-longest in US history, matching the 2013 shutdown.
The US government is closed for business.
Since the government shutdown began on October 1, an estimated 900,000 federal workers across various agencies have been furloughed, meaning they have been placed on unpaid leave. Meanwhile, others are working without pay.
As the Trump administration threatens to permanently lay off some federal workers — an unprecedented move during shutdowns — the stakes for reopening the government have been heightened.
Congress has been in a gridlock, unable to reopen the government, as Democratic representatives push against legislation that would cut subsidies for the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare.
The budget approval process we know today was introduced in 1974, when Congress passed the Budget Act of 1974 in response to President Richard Nixon’s impounding of federal funds approved by Congress during his presidency.
Since then, there have been more than a dozen shutdowns.
As of October 17, the ongoing shutdown ranks as the fourth-longest in US history, in a tie with the 2013 shutdown.
We ranked the 10 longest government shutdowns in US history using the House of Representatives’ list, which counts shutdown duration from the first day of the funding gap to the last full day the government was shut down, not including the day that the legislation reopening the government was signed into law.
See how the ongoing shutdown compares to past government shutdowns.
Michelle Gross
- Japan is known for technological innovation and hospitality, influencing new hotel trends.
- Michelle Gross spent 4 nights at Yotel Tokyo Ginza, a hotel that leverages robots and automation.
- She says some robot features were convenient, but others were unnecessary.
The first time I stayed in a robot hotel in Tokyo was in 2019, and not only was the technology glitchy, but the humanoid robots creeped me out. So when a new hybrid-robot hotel, Yotel Tokyo Ginza, opened in the same neighborhood earlier this year, I thought I’d give it a try.
I’ve been covering Japan’s travel and hospitality scene for the better part of the last decade, and as tourism reaches an all-time high in 2025, ongoing labor shortages have forced the service and hospitality industry to think creatively about how to better serve the influx of travelers in the months and years ahead.
Of course, Japan has long been ahead of the curve when it comes to technological advancements — from the country’s high-speed Shinkansen bullet trains to its automated vending machine restaurants — and is famous for its hospitality, known as omotenashi. I was curious to see how this new hybrid robot hotel experience would stack up.