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The longest government shutdowns in US history, ranked

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Sen. James Lankford (R-OK), Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD), Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso (R-WY), and Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) step away from reporters following a Republican policy luncheon at the U.S. Capitol Building on October 15, 2025
Congress has failed to agree on a funding bill to keep the government open.

  • 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.

10. In 1995, the government shut down for five days as the Clinton administration debated with congressional Republicans on budget priorities.
President Bill Clinton meets with congressional leaders in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington. From left are, Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, House Speaker Newt Gingrich of Ga., the president, and Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole of Kansas.

Dates: November 13 to 19, 1995

On November 13, 1995, the government entered a five-day shutdown as congressional Republicans and the Clinton administration failed to reach an agreement on budget priorities.

The disagreements began after the House and Senate both flipped to a Republican majority during the midterm elections, when Republican politicians, including Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, campaigned on a platform of reduced government spending, as outlined in what they called a “Contract with America.”

Having control of the House for the first time in 40 years, the Republicans passed a spending bill that cut federal funding for Medicare and gave states more power over welfare programs, such as Medicaid.

Clinton vetoed the bill, and the government shut down for five days before Congress passed a temporary funding bill to keep federal agencies working.

The budget debates later led to what became, at the time, the longest government shutdown in US history.

8. (tie) In 1977, the federal government shut down — twice — for eight days over the use of Medicaid funds for abortions.
President Jimmy Carter at his desk in the Oval Office, talking to his new Chief of Staff Hamilton Jordan, White House, Washington D C, July 19th 1979. (Photo by Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Dates: October 31 to November 9, and November 30 to December 9, 1977

The government shut down for eight days twice between October 31 and December 9, 1977, after a longer gap in funding at the beginning of that October. The three funding gaps accounted for a total of 28 days that year during which the federal government operated outside its appropriated budget.

The gaps in funding came as the Democrat-led House and Senate argued over whether Medicaid funds should be used to pay for abortions.

Despite the funding gap, most federal agencies continued to operate as usual, and workers were not furloughed. This was the norm before the 1981 Supreme Court decision, which ruled that federal agencies lacked the legal means to operate during periods of funding gaps.

7. In 1976, an appropriations bill vetoed by President Ford resulted in a 10-day funding gap.
PPresident Gerald Ford giving the State of the Union Address. January 19, 1976

Dates: September 30 to October 11, 1976

The first government shutdown occurred in 1976, when President Gerald Ford vetoed an appropriations bill for the Departments of Labor and Health, Education, and Welfare passed by Congress, citing the increases as “inflationary,” as reported by The New York Times at the time.

While Congress overrode the veto on October 1, the process resulted in a lapse in funding that lasted for 10 days.

6. In 1979, another fight in Congress over Medicaid funding for abortions shut down the government for 11 days.
President Jimmy Carter Speaking at Press Conference

Dates: September 30 to October 12, 1979

The debate over the use of Medicaid funds for abortions that had resulted in 28 days of lapsed funding in 1977 continued in the following years.

In 1979, the House and Senate, both held by Democratic majorities, disagreed on how Medicaid funds should be used for abortions, with the House passing a restrictive bill and the Senate looking for a more permissive approach that would allow for funding in cases of rape and incest.

Funding restarted when a compromise bill was passed, which included the Senate’s approach to abortion funding and a raise in congressional salaries.

5. Also in 1977, the government shut down for 12 days over Medicaid restrictions on abortion funding.
Pres. Jimmy Carter, center, delivers his proposals for energy conservation before a Joint Session of Congress on Capital Hill, Wednesday, April 21, 1977, Washington, D.C. Vice Pres. Walter Mondale is seated, left, with House Speaker Thomas ONeill at right. (AP Photo)

Dates: September 30 to October 13, 1977

The longest funding gap of 1977 happened on September 30, when the House and Senate failed to pass a funding bill for the Departments of Labor and Health, Education, and Welfare over disagreements on the use of Medicaid funding for abortions.

While both chambers were controlled by the president’s party, the House advocated for funding only in cases where the mother’s life was at risk, while the Senate backed a less restrictive approach, which would also provide funding in cases of rape and incest.

The disagreement led to the passage of a temporary funding bill, which expired on October 31 and was followed by two more lapses in funding.

Like other funding gaps prior to 1977, federal agencies continued working, and no federal employees were furloughed.

4. In 2013, the government shut down for 16 days over Obamacare funding.
President Barack Obama (C) meets with Senate Democratic leadership, (L-R) Senate Majority Whip Sen. Richard Durbin (D-IL), Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY), Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA), and Senate Majority Leader Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV) to discuss the government shutdown and the nation's debt ceiling in the Oval Office of the White House October 12, 2013

Dates: September 30 to October 17, 2013

After 16 years without a government shutdown, the Democratic-controlled Senate and the Republican-held House failed to pass a funding bill due to disagreements over the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare.

In an effort to diminish the act, the House passed two funding bills that would defund portions of the program and delay its implementation by a year; however, neither was passed by the Senate.

The showdown led to over 800,000 federal workers being furloughed during budget negotiations, while pay for active-duty military members was agreed upon by the president and Congress.

After two weeks, the House passed a funding bill without restrictions for the health law.

3. In 1978, President Carter shut down the government for 17 days over “wasteful” spending.
President Carter held a meeting at the White House on the Humphrey-Hawkins full employment bill which the administration hopes Congress will pass before adjourning later in the week. Left to right: Hamilton Jordan, Presidential Assistant; Jimmy Carter; Louis Martin, Assistant to the President on Black Policy; Ed Pena, representing the League of United Latin Americans; and Senator Muriel Humphrey, Democrat from Minnesota.

Dates: September 30 to October 18, 1978

The longest government shutdown of the Carter presidency started on September 30, 1978, when the president vetoed a spending bill that included funding for a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier and a series of water public works projects, which he deemed wasteful.

The veto, added to the existing congressional disagreements over Medicaid abortion funding, led to a 17-day impasse that ended once Congress removed both the aircraft carrier and water works funding from the funding bill.

2. In 1995, the government shut down for 21 days after Clinton vetoed the Republicans’ long-term budget.
From left, American politicians US Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, US Vice President Al Gore, US President Bill Clinton, and Speaker of the US House of Representatives Newt Gingrich, shakes hands in the White House's Oval Office, Washington DC, December 19, 1995. They were shaking hands following an agreement to work together in order to create a seven-year balanced budget plan to end the partial shutdown of the federal government.

Dates: December 15, 1995, to January 6, 1996

Following the shorter, five-day shutdown on November 13, 1995, the government entered another funding gap on December 15, after a temporary funding bill expired without Congress and the president agreeing on a bill to keep the government open.

The government stood at a stalemate for 21 days, with federal agencies furloughing workers during the holiday season.

The shutdown came to an end when congressional Republicans, who had lost public support in the polls, as reported by NPR, passed a balanced budget that avoided hikes in Medicare premiums and funding cuts for federal agencies.

The government did not shut down again for 16 years.

1. In 2018, the government shut down for 34 days over debates on funding a border wall and protecting Dreamers.
President Donald Trump talks to reporters during a meeting of his cabinet in the Cabinet Room at the White House February 12, 2019

Dates: December 21, 2018, to January 25, 2019

The longest government shutdown in US history began on December 21, 2018, after House Democrats refused to approve spending bills that provided the Trump administration with $5.7 billion in funding for a wall along the southern border, which the president had insisted on.

While clean funding bills were passed through the House and the Senate, both of which were held by Republican majorities, the president refused to approve the budgets, resulting in a 34-day stalemate.

During the nearly five weeks the government was closed, airports began experiencing flight delays as air traffic controllers and TSA workers, who were working without pay, began calling out sick en masse. TSA reported that the number of employees taking sick leave had more than doubled since the beginning of the shutdown.

The shutdown ended when the president and Congress agreed on a funding bill that didn’t include funding for the border wall.

The current ongoing shutdown already ranks within the top five longest in US history.
house democrats government shutdown

Dates: October 1, 2025, to current

The government shut down on October 1, 2025, after Congress failed to agree on funding measures, with a key point of contention being healthcare subsidies.

Democrats refused to support a temporary funding bill passed by House Republicans that lacked protections against provisions from Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill,” which they say would cut federal funding, expand Medicaid requirements, and reduce subsidies for the Affordable Care Act, citing increased healthcare premiums.

Federal funding expired on October 1 as both sides failed to reach an agreement.

With the Senate failing to advance a funding bill for the 10th time since the shutdown began on Thursday, the shutdown is expected to continue into next week, when the next vote is scheduled.

As far as negotiations go, the stalemate appears to have no clear end in sight, even as furloughed federal workers and some employees working without pay enter a third week of uncertainty.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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I spent 4 nights at a robot hotel in Tokyo. The future of hospitality is here — but it still needs fine-tuning.

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side-by-side picture of exterior of Yotel and Michelle Gross smiling in Tokyo
Yotel Tokyo Ginza is a hybrid-robot hotel that opened earlier this year.

  • 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.

Yotel Tokyo Ginza is a four-star lifestyle hotel that opened earlier this year.
Yotel exterior

Yotel Tokyo Ginza is located in Tokyo’s buzzy Ginza neighborhood, which is known for having some of Tokyo’s most upscale shopping malls, luxury boutiques, and five-star hotels, including Conrad Tokyo and The Peninsula. I love staying in Ginza due to its convenient location to some of the city’s top attractions like Tsukiji Outer Market, Kabukiza Theater, and Art Aquarium Museum.

While the price of a hotel room in Ginza averages $340 per night during the week, and $444 on the weekend according toSkyscanner.com, rooms at YOTEL average $133 per night — a comparatively cost-effective option. (Editor’s note: The author paid a reduced media rate for her visit.)

It felt like a big change from the first robot hotel I stayed at, which had rudimentary technology.
2019 tokyo hotel robot

On a visit to Tokyo in 2019, I checked into Henn Na Hotel Tokyo Ginza. While the hotel is in a great neighborhood, the technology was glitchy, and the animatronic concierge was kind of creepy.

In Yotel’s lobby area, there are self-service check-in kiosks and a luggage delivery service.
mission control check in kiosks

Contactless check-in can be done at one of three airline-style self-service kiosks, which come with touchscreens that let you collect your room key in under a minute. It was easy to use, but I noticed that the majority of guests opted to check in with a human at a separate reception desk.

While I didn’t try it on this visit, you can also book same-day luggage delivery, which will take your bags from the hotel to Narita or Haneda airport in Tokyo for a fee.

After I checked in, I was greeted by two of Yotel’s in-house robot crew members, or ‘Yobots’.
hotel Yobots

Yotel Tokyo has two ‘Yobots,’ named Tomo and Aibo. The Japanese word Tomo (とも) translates to “friend” when written with the kanji, and Aibo (あいぼう) translates to “partner,” or “buddy.” Yobots are on hand to escort guests to their rooms and deliver room service.

Once I received my room key, I scanned it with Tomo, who promptly escorted me up to my room.
tomo robot

Tomo escorted me from the lobby to the elevator bank and all the way up to the 6th floor.

While it was a novelty, it wasn’t exactly necessary. The human receptionist at the hotel said the hotel hopes the robot crew will be capable of delivering luggage to guest rooms in the future, which I think would be much more useful.

The view from my room overlooked Ginza.
skyline view of Tokyo

There are 244 guest rooms on the property. Not every room comes with a view, so make sure you book a Premium Plus room, like I was in, which is set on the front side of the hotel and offers nice views of Ginza.

Rooms at Yotel are compact and minimalist, but I loved the motorized SmartBeds.
Yotel bedroom

What the rooms and bathrooms lack in size, they make up for in smart design. I tend to work from bed a lot when I travel, and while there is a desk in the room, I enjoyed taking advantage of the full adjustable SmartBeds’ ability to prop up with the touch of a button.

The size of the bathroom might be tough for two people, but it worked for me since I was here solo.

When I needed an in-room amenity delivered, robot room service was a phone call away.
Aibo Yobot at Yotel

I have to admit, having a robot deliver items directly to my door was not only a novelty but also extremely fast. In an effort to minimize waste, room amenities are free but only available upon request. I requested pajamas and a toothbrush, but Yobots are also capable of delivering food or drinks from the hotel restaurant.

Once the robot room service arrived, I received an automated call on my in-room phone alerting me to open the door.
Yobot delivering room service

It probably took less than three minutes from the time I called for robot room service for the Yobot to arrive at my door with my pajamas and toothbrush. I quickly read the instructions and hit a button that opened the robot’s drawers. Once I retrieved the items, the task was complete, and the robot returned downstairs.

Set on the ground floor of the hotel, Komyuniti is Yotel’s all-day restaurant and bar concept.
Yotel restaurant

Komyuniti is Yotel’s all-day restaurant and bar concept. The restaurant is staffed entirely by humans and features a daily happy hour and afternoon tea service. Breakfast and coffee are served buffet-style for an additional fee, though I didn’t feel like the meal was worth it.

After spending a few days in Tokyo, I began to notice more robots and automated experiences popping up across the city.
robot in airport

As Japan continues to grapple with an aging population and worker shortage, there’s no doubt that Yotel’s hybrid-human to robot service model will continue to become more prevalent in hotels and restaurants across Japan. One café I visited was even using robots being operated remotely by people with disabilities.

As a frequent solo traveler to Japan, I enjoyed my stay at Yotel, but there’s room for improvement.
Michelle Gross smiling while holding a cocktail

Overall, I really enjoyed my stay at Yotel and would stay again. While I think it’s clever how this brand has integrated robots into the hotel experience, I would like to see more functionality from them, like delivering my luggage to the room or a robot barista whipping up a cup of coffee on my next visit.

Do you have a story to share about a unique automated experience? If so, please reach out to the editor tmartinelli@businessinsider.com.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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