Continuing Resolutions & Government Shutdowns

When Congress can’t finish its appropriations bills on time, it often turns to a Continuing Resolution (CR) — a temporary law that keeps agencies funded at existing levels. If no CR or full-year funding bill passes, the government partially shuts down.

1. What Is a Continuing Resolution?
A Continuing Resolution extends funding for federal programs using the previous year’s budget as a baseline.
  • Usually lasts days, weeks, or months until new appropriations are enacted.
  • Prevents interruptions in government operations during budget delays.
CRs keep the lights on — literally — when Congress runs out of time.
2. Why CRs Are Needed
The federal fiscal year begins on October 1. Congress must pass 12 appropriations bills before then — a tall order in a divided government.
  • CRs prevent funding gaps between fiscal years.
  • They’re a stopgap, not a solution — often delaying hard decisions.
3. Limitations of a CR
Continuing Resolutions maintain last year’s funding levels and typically bar new projects or spending increases.
  • They freeze hiring, delay contracts, and restrict program flexibility.
  • Agencies often operate under uncertainty, unable to plan for the long term.
CRs keep government running — but on autopilot.
4. What Happens in a Government Shutdown
If no appropriations or CR passes, funding authority lapses and a shutdown begins.
  • “Essential” personnel continue working without pay until funding resumes.
  • “Non-essential” operations — like museums and passport services — close temporarily.
  • Back pay is usually granted retroactively once funding is restored.
Shutdowns disrupt services, delay paychecks, and ripple through the economy.
5. How Shutdowns End
Shutdowns end when Congress passes — and the President signs — either a CR or final appropriations.
  • Often, negotiations tie in broader policy deals or spending caps.
  • Longer shutdowns (like 2013 and 2018–19) underscore deep political standoffs.
Restoring funding is usually bipartisan once the costs mount.
6. Why It Matters
CRs and shutdowns reveal how budget gridlock affects real people — from federal workers to local economies.
The power of the purse isn’t just procedural — it’s personal and national.