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The Intercept Briefing

Government Shutdown and Free Speech Showdown

The Intercept Briefing

The Intercept

Politics, News, News Commentary

4.76.4K Ratings

🗓️ 2 October 2025

⏱️ 38 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The federal government shut down on Wednesday as President Donald Trump threatened mass federal layoffs. Republicans are blaming Democrats for the shutdown, while Democrats are refusing to support a Republican spending bill without guarantees to extend Obamacare provisions set to expire and reverse GOP health care cuts earlier this year.

“Democrats are ... trying to reverse some of the cuts from the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' that was passed earlier this year to Medicaid,” says Intercept politics reporter Jessica Washington. “So what Democrats are really trying to message here is that they're fighting for health care, both to reverse some of these Medicaid cuts and also to ensure that the Affordable Care Act subsidies continue.”

This week on The Intercept Briefing, senior politics reporter Akela Lacy speaks to Washington about the government shutdown and the impact it will have on public services, including essential services and federal workers.

We’re also following a federal court case where an appointee of Ronald Reagan blasted the Trump administration for unlawfully targeting pro-Palestine students for protected speech. 

“It’s a historic ruling that rightly affirms that the First Amendment protects non-citizens lawfully present in the U.S. just as it protects citizens,” says Ramya Krishnan, lecturer at Columbia University Law School and senior staff attorney at the Knight First Amendment Institute, which represented plaintiffs in the case. “And if free speech means anything in this country, it means the government can't lock you up simply because it disagrees with your political views.”

Listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

There are some things you'll never understand.

0:02.8

Like, why did that person ghost me?

0:05.2

When did man-spreading become socially acceptable?

0:07.8

And how come that dinosaur theme park keeps reopening, given its safety record?

0:12.6

But some things you can understand.

0:15.2

Like your Experian credit score.

0:17.4

The more you improve your score, the more you could save,

0:19.7

on things like credit cards, car loans,

0:22.4

mobile contracts, and more.

0:24.5

It's dead easy to check and completely free.

0:27.4

Download the Experian app and check your score today.

0:36.5

Welcome to the Intercept Briefing. I'm Akela Lacey. The federal government shut down just after midnight on Wednesday. The shutdown could lead to mass federal layoffs and threaten some essential services, though most critical workers in air traffic control and social security will work without pay for the

0:55.5

time being. If this all sounds familiar to you, it should. Shutdowns have become more common

1:02.0

over the last 30 years, and the most recent showdowns feel more and more like a charade.

1:08.5

Another fight threatened to shut down the government just seven months ago.

1:12.3

The most recent shutdown is the second under Donald Trump.

1:16.1

The first under Trump in 2018

1:18.3

marked the longest government shutdown in US history,

1:22.2

35 days, forcing some federal workers

1:25.2

to take out loans to make ends meet.

1:31.2

Republicans who control both branches of Congress and the White House have not passed a federal spending bill since Trump took office.

1:36.2

They need Democratic votes to do so,

...

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