As the government shutdown inflicts growing pain on federal workers and the public, a fundamental question arises: do the lawmakers who created this crisis feel any of that pain themselves? The continued deadlock, cemented by Wednesday’s failed Senate votes, suggests a profound lack of empathy, as members of Congress remain shielded from the consequences of their own inaction.
Members of Congress continue to receive their paychecks during a shutdown. While some voluntarily donate their salaries to charity, their financial security is not threatened in the same way as the federal employees they have furloughed. This creates a disconnect between their experience and the reality faced by their constituents.
The daily lives of lawmakers are also largely insulated. They can still travel, their offices remain staffed, and they are not the ones waiting in long security lines at understaffed airports. They are debating the shutdown from a position of relative comfort and privilege.
This lack of shared experience can make it easier to engage in high-stakes political brinkmanship. If lawmakers were facing the prospect of a missed mortgage payment or an empty refrigerator, the urgency to find a compromise would likely be much greater.
Critics argue that this empathy gap is a root cause of Washington’s dysfunction. Until elected officials are forced to experience the consequences of their decisions more directly, they will continue to treat governance as a political game, rather than as a solemn responsibility with real-world impacts on the lives of the people they represent.