David M. Drucker: The perverse incentives fueling this long shutdown

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What if the federal government shut down and few people noticed — or cared? Nearly one month since the lights went out in Washington, most Americans don’t seem all that aware, let alone upset. Perhaps that’s why Democrats and Republicans in Congress, and President Donald Trump, are showing little interest in supporting compromise legislation to fund the government, reopen shuttered agencies and restart paused services.

Speaker Mike Johnson has basically disbanded the House of Representatives indefinitely, signaling he won’t gavel the chamber back into session until Senate Democrats vote to reopen Washington, although the Louisiana Republican’s apparent confidence that the politics of the impasse are unfolding in his party’s favor — shared by Trump and the Senate GOP — might yet prove incorrect. (House Republicans approved short-term legislation to fund the government before the money ran out on Sept. 30. Senate Democrats filibustered the bill, and here we are.)

“If you aren’t a government worker fretting payless paydays, the shutdown has shown very few impacts on American life,” Republican operative Barret Marson told me.

I checked in with Marson late last week because he is based in metropolitan Phoenix. His political environment is the perfect combination of “not the Washington bubble” and “battleground state that absorbs its fair share of partisan advertising.” His read: “People outside DC care more about the NBA gambling scandal and what the real meaning of 6-7 is than whether someone in the Bureau of Labor Statistics is showing up to an office. Impacts to daily life in Arizona seem scant.”

As Marson points out, if you’re among the millions of federal employees who are, or might be, adversely impacted by this latest government shutdown, you have noticed and you do care . Ditto your family, friends and the communities invested in your financial and psychological well-being. Soon to be added to their ranks if the shutdown doesn’t end soon: Americans who rely on SNAP benefits (food stamps) as well as active duty military and their families.

Their concerns might eventually spread to voters who aren’t directly affected. Maybe the air traffic controllers will walk off the job; Transportation Safety Administration employees (airport security screeners) might do the same. Americans hate to be inconvenienced, especially around major travel holidays like Thanksgiving and Christmas. Cumulatively, lawmakers in both parties could be compelled to change course, possibly quickly. But for now, Democrats and Republicans in Washington — and Trump — aren’t feeling intense pressure to end the government shutdown. If anything, and this is the key point, the incentives for all involved are to keep the dysfunction rolling.

First, let’s attend to the Democrats.

Congressional Democrats are demanding an extension of expiring Affordable Care Act health insurance subsidies in exchange for their votes to reopen the government. The subsidies are popular and without them, health insurance costs are going to skyrocket, and not just for Democrats in blue states. Many voters who swear by Trump and live in red states are going to suffer, which is why MAGA acolyte, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, wants to compromise with the Democrats.

That and the polling, which is not all that bad for the Democrats so far, would be enough for them to keep the fight going. But there’s a third reason, and it’s probably the most important: For months, the Democratic Party’s progressive base has demanded more resistance to Trump from their establishment’s leaders, who for decades opposed tactical government shutdowns as a matter of principle. Having taken the plunge and been rewarded by a swooning base, Democratic leaders have little motivation to quit (yet).

“Only pain will push a resolution,” Dane Strother, a Democratic operative who splits time between Sacramento and DC, told me. “This could well continue for some time.”

Strother offered both a word of caution for his party — “there are no winners in the shutdown” — and some blame Trump and the GOP: “Voters recognize Republicans control all three branches of government. Trump thrives on chaos so he won’t step up and work for a solution so this could well continue for some time.” Well, yes, but.

As I’ve previously written, the party that instigates the shutdown is typically rebuked by voters because they view the tactic as an illegitimate form of political combat. Check with the losing side in prior shutdowns. Trump and Republicans are accordingly confident that, as the president is fond of saying, they have more cards to play in this standoff.

It also can’t be said enough: Trump and congressional Republicans simply do not want to show weakness and reward the Democrats’ shutdown strategy by extending Obamacare subsidies in exchange for votes to reopen Washington. “We are not going to hold the American people hostage to have a policy dispute,” White House Deputy Chief of Staff James Blair said in an interview with Punchbowl News. “Let’s figure out what we can do together (on health care). “But you have to open the government.”

And so, from the Republicans’ perspective, compromise carries a bigger risk than digging in. They’re probably right to feel that way. But a caveat:

The party that provokes the shutdown tends to lose partly because the other party plays the role of innocent bystander, doing everything possible short of acquiescing to the opposition’s demands, while doing everything legally possible to mitigate the disruption. Trump laying off government workers and selectively withholding funds from districts and states represented by congressional Democrats — even Johnson recessing the House — risk making the president and his party look like active participants in the shutdown, just like the Democrats.

That unusual factor has the potential to scramble how voters assign blame.

David M. Drucker is columnist covering politics and policy. He is also a senior writer for The Dispatch and the author of “In Trump’s Shadow: The Battle for 2024 and the Future of the GOP.”

 

 

Following a brief Wild stint, Justin Brazeau’s breakout not surprising

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You won’t find a red and green, Justin Brazeau replica jersey for sale at any of the merchandise stands inside Grand Casino Arena. Not even on the clearance rack.

The 19 regular season games — plus six more in the playoffs — that Brazeau spent with Minnesota Wild last season put him in a rare “blink and you missed them” category in the quarter-century history of the franchise. One likes to think he will have a “Wild short-timers” reunion someday, trading stories with Chris Simon (12 games in Minnesota), Rem Pitlick (20 games in Minnesota) and Gustav Nyquist (37 games, in two different stints, in Minnesota).

It was barely noticed on July 1 when the Penguins inked Brazeau to a free-agent contract that will pay him $1.5 million this season. But they have taken notice of the 27-year-old Canadian in Pittsburgh, and not just because of his towering 6-foot-6 frame.

“It’s a massive human with great hands who’s got a really good ability to get himself either open at the net front or put himself in a position to shoot,” said first-year Penguins coach Dan Muse, following the team’s Thursday morning skate in St. Paul. “I think he’s done a good job away from the puck as well.”

Playing wing on the Wild’s fourth line, with Yakov Trenin on the other wing and Marco Rossi at center, Brazeau had a goal and an assist in the regular season last year, and chipped in with two assists in the six-game, first-round playoff loss to Vegas.

Elevated to the second line in Pittsburgh alongside two other massive humans — Evgeni Malkin and Anthony Mantha, who are both 6-foot-5 — Brazeau set the tone for a breakout season with two goals in the Penguins’ season-opening win at Madison Square Garden against the Rangers, and he has hardly slowed down since then. He returned to Minnesota with six goals and six assists in his first 11 games.

“Its obviously been a nice fresh start, getting to play with some really good players and trying to make the most of it,” said Brazeau, who came to the Wild from Boston at the early March trade deadline last season. “I just try to do what I do and fit in the best I can.”

While some have marveled at the breakout offense from an unexpected source, especially on a team with stars like Sidney Crosby, Malkin and Mantha, his former boss in Minnesota is not at all shocked.

“Braz has got good hands, he gets around the net, so it’s not necessarily surprising, because he did the same thing in Boston,” Wild coach John Hynes said. “So, good for him. He’s a good kid.”

Some have grumbled that the Wild putting Brazeau in a fourth-line checking role was not the best use of what has been revealed as a scoring threat, especially when his big body gets around the crease. Others say his early season success is emblematic of the kind of boost a player can get from a change of scenery.

When the Wild picked up forward Vinnie Hinostroza off waivers in February of last season, he had posted two assists in 13 games with Nashville. In a Wild sweater, Hinostroza put up five goals and three assists in 25 games, and played a vital bottom-six forward role while the team was a mess of injuries. He sees Brazeau benefitting from a similar change of scenery.

“He’s got a great opportunity there and he’s really taking advantage of it,” said Hinostroza, who was Brazeau’s linemate for part of their time together in Minnesota. “He’s a big body and he can move around pretty good, and he’s got good hands around the net. So, I’m definitely not surprised. I’m happy for him. He’s playing the best hockey of his life.”

Brazeau was in North Carolina with the Bruins when he found out he had been traded to Minnesota. The Wild were in British Columbia at the time, leading to a cross-continent odyssey for the player to fly from Raleigh to Denver to Vancouver, across four time zones, to join his new team. Before facing the Wild on Thursday, Brazeau joked that his arrival in Pittsburgh involved fewer miles and fewer hours.

“A little shorter flight this time, instead of Carolina to Vancouver,” he said. “It’s been a lot of fun so far.”

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Early lead slips away as Wild’s October woes deepen

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In this opening month where nothing has come easy for the Minnesota Wild, an early lead Thursday slipped away, and the hole they have dug in October got just a little deeper.

Versus a better-than-expected Pittsburgh team loaded with weapons, the Wild managed just one goal and saw the Penguins take over the game in the third period. Pittsburgh’s 4-1 win was the fifth consecutive loss for a Wild team that last won on Oct. 20 against the Rangers in New York.

With the Penguins’ scorers coming at him in waves, Minnesota goalie Filip Gustavsson made 29 saves in the loss.

Kirill Kaprizov scored a rare early goal for the Wild, but their previously potent power play provided no relief as they went 0 for 4 with the man advantage and fell to 3-6-3 to close out October.

With the game tied 1-1 in the third, Pittsburgh got goals from Bryan Rust and Ben Kindel just 61 seconds apart. The Penguins are now 6-0-2 in their last eight games.

The Wild took the first lead midway through the opening period when Kaprizov fought off a check in front of the net and redirected a cross-ice pass by Marcus Johansson. It was Kaprizov’s team-leading seventh goal of the season, and extended his points streak to four games.

It also marked the first time since a 2-1 overtime loss in Philadelphia on Oct. 18 that Minnesota scored the first goal of a game.

The Penguins appeared to have tied the game, briefly, when Evgeni Malkin slipped a shot past the goalie from the low slot. But after review, officials determined that contact made by Pittsburgh forward Justin Brazeau on Gustavsson before the shot went in constituted goaltender interference, and they ruled no goal. Pittsburgh challenged the call, but after review the call was upheld, giving the Wild their first power play of the night.

Minnesota, which entered the game with the top power play in the NHL, got two man advantages in the first but failed to build on their lead.

Pittsburgh survived a surge by the Wild and tied the game for real early in the second when defenseman Ryan Shea’s long-range shot through a crowd found the back of the net.

The Wild bench went down a man a short time later when a shot by Penguins defenseman Erik Karlsson hit Minnesota center Danila Yurov below the belt. Yurov crumpled to the ice immediately and had to be helped to the locker room. He returned to the game midway through the middle frame.

The Penguins, who have not qualified for the NHL playoffs since 2022, are off the a 8-2-2 start. Minnesota, which has the worst penalty-kill numbers in the league, surrendered a goal on Pittsburgh’s first power play of the game.

Gustavsson came to the bench for an extra attacker with just under three minutes to play, but Pittsburgh’s Anthony Mantha hit a shot into the empty net from beyond the far blue line.

Tristan Jarry had 27 saves for the Penguins in their lone regular season visit to Minnesota. The Wild play in Pittsburgh on Nov. 21.

Up next is the fifth game of the Wild’s current six-game homestand when they host the Vancouver Canucks on Saturday evening at 6 p.m. The Wild are 1-3-2 at home this season.

Briefly

Pittsburgh’s second shot on goal of the game was a slapper from the blue line delivered by defenseman Matt Dumba, who was playing in his fifth game for the Penguins. Dumba, 31, was the Wild’s first round pick, seventh overall, in the 2012 NHL Draft. He spent his first 10 seasons with the Wild and has skated for Arizona, Tampa Bay, Dallas and now Pittsburgh since leaving Minnesota in 2023.

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21-year-old man arrested in Vadnais Heights sexual assault

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An arrest has been made after a woman was sexually assaulted in Vadnais Heights earlier this week, authorities say.

On Thursday, the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office arrested a 21-year-old White Bear Township man who is suspected of sneaking up behind the woman, dragging her to a secluded area and sexually assaulting her, according to authorities.

“In this case, tips from the community and help from the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension crime lab led to the arrest of a violent criminal suspect,” Sheriff Bob Fletcher said in a news release. “The victim provided key information to investigators that allowed us to act quickly and share accurate details with the public. The victim fought hard, knocked his glasses off, and bit his hand — and still managed to give us a detailed description of her attacker.”

The woman reported she was walking just before 8 p.m. Tuesday on the sidewalk near the intersection of Centerville Road and Pondview Drive when a man ran up from behind, forced her off the path and sexually assaulted her, according to the sheriff’s office. After the attack, the woman ran to a nearby home seeking help and was then taken to a hospital for evaluation and treatment.

The suspect was arrested Thursday in the 1500 block of Mead Road in White Bear Township.

“The arrest would not have happened without the victim’s courage, the community’s help, and the BCA’s professional processing of DNA evidence,” Fletcher added.

Following the arrest, investigators conducted a search warrant in which authorities said they obtained additional evidence. The suspect is being held in the Ramsey County jail, and formal charges are expected to be filed Friday.

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