Shutdown or Clear Out?
In many other countries, when an impasse like the current one in Washington is reached, rather than a shutdown, it triggers a change in government, through national elections or changes to a coalition.Both are, essentially, methods to either release political pressure or force a compromise to allow the government to continue peacefully.
However, owing to the U.S. Constitution, calling an early election would not be available to the United States without passing an amendment fundamentally changing the way the federal government works.
Parliamentary Versus Presidential
Due to the system of checks and balances in Washington, government branches are frequently controlled by different parties, such as a Republican president working with a Democrat legislature or vice versa.The American system, in which the U.S. president has wide-ranging executive powers, often results in situations where a bill cannot achieve the necessary number of votes to pass.
Commanding a majority is either achieved by a political party securing an outright majority, as most commonly occurs in the United Kingdom, or by forming a coalition with a selection of parties that will agree to back the government’s plans.
This is more often than not the situation in European nations such as Germany, the Netherlands, and Denmark.
This feature means that budgetary bills generally pass through the legislature, as failure often results in an election.
Fixed Versus Flexible Elections
In the United States, elections to the presidency, the House of Representatives, and the Senate are held on a strict schedule, whereas in most other nations, there are facilities for them to be called early.This means that the chance of individual politicians losing either their post in government or seat in the legislature is much higher overseas than it is in the United States if a government cannot pass a budget, as it will likely lead to a new election.
As a result, compromise across political divides in the case of a coalition, or strict party discipline within the single governing party in a majority government, is more likely if the country could go to the polls at any moment.
Filibuster Rule
Another feature peculiar to the United States is the “filibuster rule“ in the Senate, whereby a senator may time a bill out by speaking unless 60 votes are achieved to force them to stop.The US Anti-Deficiency Act
Even in the United States, these shutdowns are a relatively recent phenomenon, only becoming a common feature of American politics in the past four decades.Under the American system, the different branches of government have to reach an agreement on spending plans before they become law, but in times gone by, there was more leeway to allow spending while a bill worked its way through.
This decision meant that if no budget could be passed, there would be no spending, revising the previous interpretation, which held that if there was a gap in budgets, the government could allow some necessary spending to continue.
Since the change in 1980, there have been 11 government shutdowns, which have led to staff furloughs.
The United States is the only country that operates its spending plans in this fashion.







