Former DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson urges Congress to end government shutdown
Washington is playing a dangerous game of chicken, and federal workers are the ones getting run over. The ongoing government shutdown, fueled by partisan gridlock in the Senate, has drawn a rare rebuke from a prominent Democrat, former Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson, who’s stepping out of line to demand Congress get back to basics, as the Daily Caller reports. It’s a refreshing -- if overdue -- call for sanity in a town obsessed with political theater.
The shutdown saga, in a nutshell, stems from Senate Democrats, under Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, repeatedly blocking Republican-led spending
Jeh Johnson breaks party ranks
Early Wednesday, Senate Democrats, led by Schumer, shot down a Republican spending bill that could have reopened the government. This wasn’t a one-off; last week, they rejected a bipartisan proposal for the fifth time, refusing to budge unless their demands are met. Only three Democrats crossed the aisle to support the measure, which needed 60 votes to pass.
The sticking point? Republican Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana points the finger at Democrats for insisting on restoring millions in funding for overseas projects that many taxpayers would find eyebrow-raising.
We’re talking $4 million for LGBTQ programs in the Balkans and Uganda, $3.6 million for dance workshops in Haiti, and $6 million for Palestinian media subsidies -- items Kennedy calls wasteful and previously cut from the budget.
Kennedy argues the far-left wing of the Democratic Party is holding the shutdown hostage, threatening to derail any deal without these funds. It’s a classic case of ideology over practicality, leaving federal workers caught in the crossfire. If this is “progress,” one wonders what regression looks like.
A Democrat’s plea for workers
Enter Johnson, a Democrat and former DHS head under Barack Obama, who’s had enough of the posturing. He’s publicly breaking from his party’s stance, urging Congress to prioritize funding the government over political brinkmanship. It’s a bold move for a party loyalist, and it’s grounded in real human cost.
“I’m going to break from the party line here on this. I’m a Democrat. I’m with John Fetterman and Angus King,” Johnson declared, highlighting the Senate’s 60-vote threshold as a recurring stumbling block.
“The most basic function of Congress is to fund the government, turn the lights on, keep the government working so that the three million people who are public servants can do what they do to serve all the rest of us,” he added.
Johnson’s words cut through the noise -- governing isn’t about grandstanding; it’s about keeping the machine running. Yet, here we are, with lights off and workers unpaid.
Personal stories fuel Johnson's stand
Johnson’s frustration isn’t just theoretical; it’s personal. He recalls a haunting encounter from a decade ago when Republicans threatened to shutter DHS over immigration disputes, leaving workers in limbo. A TSA employee from West Orange, New Jersey, battling stage four cancer, pleaded with him, fearing missed paychecks would jeopardize her medical co-pays.
That memory drives Johnson today as he watches history repeat itself. He’s not blind to policy disagreements, but he’s laser-focused on the collateral damage of this shutdown. Federal employees aren’t pawns; they’re people with bills, families, and, in some cases, life-threatening illnesses.
Sympathy for workers isn’t a partisan issue, or at least it shouldn’t be. Johnson’s stance reminds us that behind every budget line item are real lives disrupted by Washington’s games. It’s a shame it takes a party defector to state the obvious.
Shutdown stalemate: Who blinks first?
Meanwhile, the Senate remains a battlefield, with Democrats doubling down on their demands for foreign funding restoration. Kennedy and other Republicans argue these projects distract from domestic priorities, especially when Americans are struggling to make ends meet. It’s hard to justify dance workshops abroad when TSA agents can’t pay for cancer treatments at home.
The bipartisan bill, rejected five times now, could have ended this mess, but Schumer’s bloc holds firm. Three Democrats breaking ranks isn’t enough to tip the scales, and the 60-vote hurdle looms large. This isn’t governance; it’s a staring contest with no winners.
What’s the endgame here? Johnson’s call to “turn the lights on” resonates as a plea for common sense, but with both sides entrenched, federal workers remain in the dark. The longer this drags on, the more it exposes a broken system where ideology trumps duty.
Time to end the theatrics
Let’s cut to the chase: Congress has one job above all -- keep the government running. Johnson’s defection from the Democratic playbook is a wake-up call, echoing the frustrations of millions who see Washington as more circus than Capitol. If a former DHS secretary can see the human toll, why can’t the Senate?
The shutdown isn’t just a policy spat; it’s a failure of leadership across the board. Republicans and Democrats alike need to stop treating federal workers as bargaining chips and start treating them as the backbone of our nation. Jeh Johnson’s voice might be a lone one now, but it’s the kind of clarity this mess desperately needs.





