The blame game is on at federal agencies, where political messages fault
Democrats for the shutdown
[October 03, 2025]
By ALI SWENSON
NEW YORK (AP) — Army veteran Samuel Port couldn’t believe what he was
reading in his latest weekly newsletter emailed from the U.S. Department
of Veterans Affairs.
It blamed Senate Democrats for the federal shutdown, saying they were
blocking a stopgap bill to fund the government “due to unrelated policy
demands.” It then listed various disruptions to veterans’ resources.
In Port’s view, the finger-pointing was inappropriate from a federal
agency and lacked the context that Republicans, too, could have taken
steps to keep the government funded. He said it wore away any trust he
had left in the VA to offer services without a political agenda.
“This blatant propaganda being spat out was astonishing,” said Port, a
Virginia-based volunteer for the progressive advocacy organization
Common Defense. “Then the astonishment turned into just anger that we’re
being politicized like this.”
Port is among a growing number of Americans whose routine interactions
with the federal government this week have been met with partisan
messaging. As a Senate deadlock keeps the federal government unfunded,
with no end in sight, some traditionally apolitical federal agencies are
using their official channels to spread a coordinated political message:
It’s the Democrats’ fault.
The rhetoric, popping up in bright-red webpage banners, email
autoreplies and social media posts, lays blame on the political party
that is out of power in Washington when both sides are refusing to
accommodate the other.
Democrats, who have minorities in both the U.S. Senate and House, have
demanded that a set of expiring health insurance tax credits be extended
before they sign on to any deal. Republicans, who need several
Democratic votes in the Senate, said those negotiations should wait
until after the funding measure passes.

Experts say the communication strategy from across the federal
government reflects how aligned President Donald Trump’s entire
administration has become in targeting his political opponents.
Far more partisan than the straightforward alerts that typically grace
agency websites during shutdowns, the messages are in keeping with
Trump’s pattern of requiring loyalty and obedience at all levels of
government.
“There’s really been a consistent and sustained effort to try to pull
the entire bureaucracy in sync with what the president wants,” said Don
Kettl, a professor emeritus and former dean of the University of
Maryland School of Public Policy. “The big risk here is that it erodes
the fundamental trust that people have in government’s ability to be
impartial.”
Several government websites blame Democrats
Many internet users noticed the first political postings from government
agencies on Tuesday, before the shutdown began. The website of the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development displayed a message warning
that “The Radical Left are going to shut down the government and inflict
massive pain on the American people unless they get their $1.5 trillion
wish list of demands.”
That afternoon, employees across the federal government reported
receiving messages from their agencies noting Trump’s general opposition
to a shutdown.
It’s difficult to know with certainty how many federal agencies and
departments are promoting the partisan language across websites, social
media accounts and email messages. Of the 15 executive departments in
Trump's Cabinet, at least 10 posted messages this week that blamed
Democrats or the “radical left” for the shutdown on their official
websites or social media accounts.
The website of the Small Business Administration placed its message in a
red banner that took up the entire screen on a smartphone. It said
actions from Senate Democrats are preventing the agency “from serving
America’s 36 million small businesses.” Other websites, including that
of the Food and Drug Administration, told visitors that mission-critical
activities would continue “during the Democrat-led government shutdown.”

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Congressional staff prepare for an event with Speaker of the House
Mike Johnson, R-La., and the top Republicans in Congress on the
first day of the government shutdown, at the Capitol in Washington,
Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2025. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Several other federal agencies and departments maintained
politically neutral messages, noting simply that there might be
delays in services or updates because of the lapse in funding.
Employee out-of-office messages are changed
At the Department of Education, out-of-office email messages were
reset Wednesday with language blaming Democrats for the shutdown.
“On September 19, 2025, the House of Representatives passed H.R.
5371, a clean continuing resolution,” the message said.
“Unfortunately, Democrat Senators are blocking passage of H.R. 5371
in the Senate which has led to a lapse in appropriations.”
Some employees tried to change it to something nonpartisan only to
see it reverted, according to an employee who spoke on condition of
anonymity for fear of retribution.
The White House isn't shying away from the politics, displaying a
by-the-second ticker on its website adding up the length of time for
which “Democrats Have Shut Down the Government.”
Concerned citizens calling the White House comment line on Wednesday
also heard a political voicemail message. In the recording, press
secretary Karoline Leavitt repeats Trump’s false claim that
Democrats forced the government shutdown fight because they want to
fund health care for illegal immigrants.
Could the messaging violate federal law?
Ethics watchdogs said the political messages from government agency
websites and emails exceed the level of partisanship they have seen
in the past from the civil service.
Multiple experts said the messages also violate a 1939 law called
the Hatch Act, which restricts certain political activities by
federal employees. Kathleen Clark, a government ethics lawyer and
law professor at Washington University, said they are “aimed at
pursuing partisan political advantages” and therefore violate the
law.
On Thursday, Democrats on the House Oversight Committee sent a
letter to the Office of Special Counsel calling for an investigation
into the messages for “apparent violations of the Hatch Act.”

Donald K. Sherman, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility
and Ethics in Washington, said he doesn’t think the messages violate
the Hatch Act because they discuss the Democratic Party related to a
policy difference rather than an election or a candidate. Still, he
said, the postings might violate other ethics laws and are “wildly
inappropriate.”
Veterans Affairs spokesman Pete Kasperowicz defended his agency's
email message, saying it was “100% factual.”
HUD Secretary Scott Turner said in a Wednesday night interview with
NewsNation that he’s not worried about the Hatch Act allegations
against his agency. He called them a “distraction” to deflect from
“irresponsible actions on the Hill” and how “Americans are being
impacted greatly by this government shutdown.”
Asked about the HUD website banner Thursday morning, House Speaker
Mike Johnson said it shared “the objective truth.”
“There are 44 Democrats in the Senate — and by the way every
Democrat in the House except one — who voted to shut the government
down,” Johnson said in a press conference outside his office. “They
are the ones that made that decision. The White House, the executive
branch, take no pleasure in this.”
___
Associated Press writers Collin Binkley, Joey Cappelletti and Gary
Fields in Washington, and video journalist Ty ONeil in Las Vegas
contributed to this report.
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