Charities supporting service members are under pressure. Army Emergency Relief has processed over 6,000 new requests since October 8, approving $7 million in aid, while Blue Star Families reports fewer than one in three military families have $3,000 in emergency savings.
The political standoff continues: House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries insists the GOP is responsible, claiming Democrats are ready to negotiate, while Republican leaders urge Democrats to support a clean funding bill to end the shutdown and pay troops.
With millions of Americans’ livelihoods on the line—from soldiers overseas to federal workers at home—Washington’s gridlock is no longer just political theater. For military families, every day the shutdown continues means real financial hardship and uncertainty.
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