The mood was grim at the Capitol Monday as Democrats and Republicans couldn't get it together for the good of the nation. 
WASHINGTON — The first shutdown of the U.S. government in 17 years 
began early Tuesday as Congress bickered and bungled an effort to fund 
federal agencies due to a bitter ideological standoff over Obamacare.
The embarrassing disruption that an angry 
President Obama
 said was “entirely preventable” and would “throw a wrench into the 
gears” of the country’s recovering economy was triggered as a midnight 
deadline passed without agreement between the Republican-controlled 
House and Democrat-run Senate.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) disclosed at midnight that 
the White House budget office had directed agencies to start closing up 
shop. He then called a recess until 9:30 a.m., meaning that there would 
be no House-Senate deal in the wee hours Tuesday.
 
Susan Walsh/AP 
President Obama criticized Republicans' efforts to delay key aspects of the Affordable Care Act. 
 
The shutdown would keep 800,000 federal workers at home on Tuesday and 
inconvenience millions of people who rely on federal services or are 
drawn to the nation’s parks and other attractions. Critical workers, 
from the Border Patrol to air-traffic controllers, would remain on the 
job, unpaid.
Legislation was passed, however, to fund the armed services during the shutdown.
 
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images 
House Speaker John Boehner said Obamacare 'is having a devastating impact.' 
 
Despite the drama, members of Congress faced no threat to their own 
pay, because the 27th Amendment to the Constitution bars their salaries 
from being subjected to the annual appropriations process. Obama, too, 
will still be paid.
PHOTOS: GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN FURLOUGHS THOUSANDS OF FEDERAL EMPLOYEES
Conservative firebrand Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.), who made himself the 
face of the GOP effort to block Obamacare through the funding bill, 
pledged Monday to donate his salary to charity during the shutdown.
 
Photos by AP, Debbie Egan-Chin/New York Daily News 
 
Many Americans will be inconvenienced by a shutdown. 
 
Repeatedly Monday, amid all the political posturing and rhetoric, the 
House amended a Senate resolution to fund the government to add a 
one-year delay in Obamacare, and other alterations. Repeatedly the 
Senate rejected those conservative-backed changes.
The House was expected to pass the latest health-care law changes in an
 early morning vote. The Senate was set to reject those additions when 
they return Tuesday.
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Win McNamee/Getty Images 
 
Senate Majority Leader Harry 
Reid (D-Nev.) arrives at the Capitol Monday. The Senate voted Monday to 
defeat a House bill that links keeping the government funded to delaying
 'Obamacare' for one year. 
 
As the nearly ridiculous legislative tit-for-tat played out, Obama went
 to the White House briefing room to insist that Republicans give up 
their demand to tie new money for the government to scuttling or 
delaying his health care law.
“One faction of one party in one house of Congress in one branch of 
government doesn’t get to shut down the entire government just to 
refight the results of an election,” Obama said.
“You don’t get to extract a ransom for doing your job, for doing what 
you’re supposed to be doing anyway, or just because there’s a law there 
that you don’t like.”
 
 
The front page of the NY Daily News on October 1, 2013. 
  
 
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House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) responded a few hours later on the 
House floor. “The American people don’t want a shutdown, and neither do 
I,” he said. Yet, he added, the new health care law “is having a 
devastating impact. . . . Something has to be done.”
Even more troubling than the shutdown was that the partisan stalemate 
that caused it sets the stage for an even more high-stakes clash, as 
Congress must soon deal with raising the debt limit by Oct. 17 — a 
matter in which both sides concede that failure would be perilous for 
the U.S. economy and economies worldwide. Republicans also want to 
attach conditions to that vote. Democrats said giving ground now would 
encourage Republicans to take a harder line in that fight.
 
Win McNamee/Getty Images 
 
Congress remained gridlocked 
Monday over legislation to continue funding the federal government. The 
federal government shut down after both chambers failed to pass a 
resolution before midnight. 
 
“You know with a bully you can’t let them slap you around because they 
slap you around today, they slap you five or six times tomorrow,” Reid 
said.
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Monday’s failure on Capitol Hill caused the stock market to drop on 
fears that gridlock would continue and Congress would shoot the 
recovering economy in the foot. The Dow Jones slipped 128 points, or 
0.8%.
 
Photo by AP  
 
The last shutdown happened during President Clinton's time in office. 
 
The fight also sent Congress’ already abysmal approval plunging to a 
new low. A CNN poll released late Monday found that just 10% of 
Americans approve of the job Congress is doing, while a record 87% 
disapprove. And Americans are blaming the Tea Party and its 
no-holds-barred-against-Obama stance for the crisis — the party had its 
lowest favorable rating in its five-year history, at 31%.
At times Monday, Washington seemed like a real-life “House of Cards,” 
the Netflix drama in which D.C. power players are motivated by dark 
self-interest rather than the national interest.
RELATED: US LAWMAKERS TRADE BARBS AS GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN LOOMS
 
JONATHAN ERNST/REUTERS 
Boehner arrives with his 
security detail at the Capitol on Monday, remained adamant that 
'Obamacare' be delayed. 'This law is not ready for prime time,' he said.
 
Congress, and the government, needed to act because there was no 
authorization for the government to spend any money as of 12:01 a.m. on 
Tuesday, the start of the new budget year.
Monday’s maneuvering began in the Democrat-controlled Senate, which 
voted, 54 to 46, to kill a House-passed bill that would keep the 
government funded but delay Obamacare for a year.
The Senate then sent the House a so-called “clean” bill — one that 
would simply keep government running through Nov. 15. With the ball back
 in their court, House Republicans sought different concessions in 
exchange for keeping the government funded. They called for a one-year 
delay in the Obamacare requirement for individuals to buy coverage.
 
Charles Dharapak/AP 
Only 36% of Americans blame President Obama for the shutdown, a poll released Monday showed. 46% blame Republicans. 
Sources: NEW YORK DAILY NEWS   
 
Shutdown effects ripple across US
 
A string of cancellations and delays caused by the
    federal government shutdown is rippling across the United
    States, ruining dream vacations, upending carefully laid
    wedding plans and complicating the lives of millions of people.
From blood drives to daycare programs, musical performances
      to research projects, the disruptions caused by the political
      stalemate in Washington sparked growing frustrations and left
      people scrambling to make alternative plans.
Scores of weddings planned at national parks and monuments
      around the country were moved or postponed, and vacationers
      hustled to change their itineraries after finding iconic
      sites from the Statue of Liberty to the Lincoln Memorial
      closed.
"We're really disappointed. We spent a lot of days waiting
      for tickets so we just want to go inside the statue," said
      Gaelle Masse, a tourist from Paris who was startled to
      discover the Statue of Liberty was closed.
    
Thousands of tourists with prepaid tickets to visit Alcatraz
      Island, the famed prison site in San Francisco Bay, were
      unable to tour the former penitentiary.
In Boston, Italian tourist Federico Paliero and his
      girlfriend Claudia Costato peered through a closed metal gate
      to catch a glimpse of the USS Constitution, a wooden,
      three-masted US Navy ship from the 18th century docked in
      Boston Harbor that serves as one of the city's major
      attractions.
Normally buzzing with tourists, the site was nearly abandoned
      on Wednesday, except for a handful of people looking lost and
      dismayed as they gawked at a sign explaining the closure.
"Italy is not the only state with money problems," Paliero
      said, rubbing his thumb and forefingers together.
At Great Smoky Mountains National Park in Tennessee, park
      staff said nearly 30 weddings scheduled for the next two
      weeks are threatened by the shutdown, which also sent
      hundreds of campers packing.
'WORRIED ABOUT RAIN'
Two dozen weddings planned at monuments on the Washington
      mall in October also were threatened, a park service
      spokeswoman said.
"I wasn't worried about the government shutting down. I was
      worried about rain," said bride-to-be MaiLien Le, who was
      planning to walk down the aisle at the Jefferson Memorial on
      Saturday.
Having to possibly change venues just days before her wedding
      is "really upsetting," she said on NBC's "Today" show.
In northern Virginia, officials canceled blood drives that
      would have provided transfusions for up to 900 area patients.
The Library of Congress in Washington closed its doors,
      disrupting research projects and canceling a musical
      performance by Randy Newman.
About one-fifth of the classes at the Naval Academy in
      Annapolis, Maryland, were scrapped, and science laboratories
      at the school were shut down as furloughs for civilian
      Defense Department employees took hold.
The Smithsonian, which shuttered all of its museums and the
      National Zoo, also had to close its early childhood center
      even though many parents had already paid between $300 and
      $400 in tuition for the week, according to local radio
      station WTOP.
"When you have to sit down and explain to a 5-year-old why he
      can't go to school, it's a difficult conversation," Virginia
      resident Brian Katz, whose two children attend the
      Smithsonian Early Enrichment Center housed in the Natural
      History Museum, told a local Fox television station.
Juleon Rabbani, 28, got a call from the National Park Service
      informing him that his scientific research in national parks
      would be shut down for now, compounding funding issues he was
      already facing.
"I wanted to graduate in the fall of 2014, but with my
      funding being held up and since my research sites are
      national parks, it will be well into 2015 before I am done,"
      he said. "The funding I need won't come through, and who
      knows how long this shutdown will be."
Some Washington businesses faced growing uncertainty as the
      shutdown continued, keeping government events away from
      hotels and federal workers out of their usual restaurants.
David Hill, general manager for two area hotels, said two
      dozen events at the hotels have been canceled in the coming
      weeks, including one large government group that triggered a
      $45,000 loss.
"What I've told my team is: for us, it's business as usual
      ... but everything in the future is in limbo," said Hill, who
      manages the Phoenix Park Hotel just blocks from the US
      Capitol and the Four Points by Sheraton near the White House.
Grain traders in Chicago were preparing to cope without
      weekly US Department of Agriculture data on export sales
      typically released on Thursdays. The data, covering sales the
      previous week, can roil prices for crops like corn and wheat
      if demand is unexpectedly strong or weak.
"For now, we'll go with our best guesses," said Sterling
      Smith, futures specialist for Citigroup.
Traders and analysts were frustrated that USDA websites went
      dark as a result of the federal shutdown. They mine the sites
      for data on crop supplies and demand to project price trends.
Terry Reilly, analyst for Futures International, said he
      could not complete presentations on the grain markets for
      clients because USDA data was unavailable.
"It makes no sense to me that they would shut down their
      websites," he said.
Sources: Reuters