Tuesday, March 31, 2026

The DHS Shutdown Nobody Is Solving Is Now the Longest in American History

BreakingDHS ShutdownFiscal CrisisMarkets & EconomyNational Security

$93 Billion and Counting — The DHS Shutdown Nobody Is Solving Is Now the Longest in American History

Day 45 of the partial DHS shutdown. Spring break at its peak. TSA officers working without pay. CISA two-thirds furloughed during an active Iran war. Cumulative shutdown-related losses closing in on $93 billion. And Congress still cannot agree on a deal. This is the most expensive political deadlock in modern American history — and almost nobody is treating it that way.

📅
StartedFebruary 14, 2026
Duration45+ days — record longest
📊
Direct Losses$2.5B+ — CEA estimate
Cumulative Total~$93B both shutdowns

The numbers in this article are not projections. They are not partisan estimates. They come from the White House’s own Council of Economic Advisers, the U.S. Travel Association, and prior shutdown cost analyses both parties accepted as accurate. The DHS partial shutdown that began on Valentine’s Day 2026 has now surpassed every previous record for duration — and its combined economic damage, stacked on last fall’s full government shutdown, has cost this country approximately $93 billion. Read that number again.


This is not a story about politics. It is a story about consequences. Real people are working without pay. Real travelers are paying real prices at airports staffed by officers wondering if their next paycheck is coming. Real cybersecurity gaps are open in real federal networks while a real Iran war is being fought. The political argument about who caused this is legitimate. The damage it is doing does not wait for that argument to resolve.

45+
Days — Longest Partial Shutdown in U.S. History
Started Feb. 14, 2026
$2.5B
Direct Economic Losses to Date
White House CEA — conservative floor
$93B
Cumulative Losses — Both Shutdowns
Fall 2025 full + 2026 partial combined
100K
DHS Workers Without Pay
$1B per month in unpaid wages

The Full Cost Breakdown — Sourced and Verified

Economic Damage — DHS Partial Shutdown 2026
Category
Amount
Source
Direct losses to date (CEA floor estimate)
$2.5B+
White House CEA
Unpaid worker wages (monthly rate)
$1B/mo
~100,000 DHS employees
Travel sector losses (weekly rate)
$1B/wk
U.S. Travel Association
Prior full shutdown (43 days, fall 2025)
~$90B
$15B/week direct + indirect
Combined cumulative shutdown losses
~$93B
Both shutdowns combined

The $2.5 billion CEA figure is explicitly conservative. The White House’s own economists acknowledge it captures only immediate effects. ✓ CEA Verified It excludes lost productivity, delayed travel, supply-chain slowdowns, and the compounding effect of uncertainty on business investment. The real number is materially higher.

The OBBBA Firewall — What It Covers and What It Doesn’t

This is a partial shutdown. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act pre-funded significant portions of CBP, ICE, and related enforcement. Approximately 90% of DHS’s 260,000+ workforce is deemed essential and continues working. But “continues working” does not mean “continues getting paid on time” — and the components left exposed include some of the most consequential operational staff in the department.

DHS Component Status — Running vs. Exposed
CBP and ICE — Largely funded by OBBBA. Border enforcement and interior enforcement are continuing. This was the explicit legislative intent. It is working for this purpose.OBBBA appropriations; DHS operational status
TSA — Working without pay. ~60,000 Transportation Security Officers are working on deferred compensation during spring break — one of the busiest travel periods of the year. ✓ TSA Union Confirmed Call-out rates, morale, and throughput efficiency are all affected. The U.S. Travel Association’s $1B/week loss estimate reflects this directly.U.S. Travel Association; TSA union statements; DHS payroll
CISA — Two-thirds furloughed. The agency responsible for protecting U.S. power grids, water systems, and financial networks from cyberattacks is at one-third capacity. ✓ DHS Confirmed This has been the case for 45+ days while Operation Epic Fury against Iran — a nation with documented offensive cyber capabilities — is actively ongoing.CISA staffing status; DHS congressional testimony; Iran cyber advisory 2025
Coast Guard civilians — Pay suspended. Civilian support infrastructure for maritime enforcement — logistics, maintenance, intelligence — is severely strained. Drug interdiction and maritime enforcement operations are degraded.Coast Guard Auxiliary statement; DHS payroll records
FEMA — Partial operations. Emergency management is at reduced capacity. Tornado season across the South and Midwest begins April 1. FEMA under shutdown conditions has historically delayed disaster declarations by 30–45 days. ✓ GAO VerifiedGAO shutdown impact report GAO-23-105792; FEMA status
⚠  Three Crises Converging Right Now

Operation Epic Fury against Iran is active and generating nation-state cyber threat activity against U.S. infrastructure. CISA — the agency that defends against those attacks — is at one-third capacity. Spring storm season begins in three weeks. FEMA is at reduced readiness. Spring break travel is at peak volume. TSA is working without pay. Any one of these would be manageable in isolation. All three simultaneously, with no funding resolution in sight, is a cascading risk scenario that has not been adequately covered by any major outlet.

This is what $93 billion in shutdown damage actually looks like. It is degraded cybersecurity during an active war, unpaid airport screeners during peak travel, and an emergency management agency running on fumes before storm season. The political argument about who caused this is legitimate. The operational consequences do not wait for the argument to end.

The Three-Way Deadlock — And Why Nobody Is Blinking

The shutdown began February 14th over three interlocking disputes that have proven impossible to separate: overall DHS funding levels, conditions on ICE enforcement operations, and border security provisions. Each side has a defensible position. None of them is paying the personal cost — the 100,000 workers not being paid are.

The Three Deadlock Points
Dispute 1 — Full appropriation vs. piecemeal funding. Republicans demand a comprehensive DHS bill covering all components. Democrats have repeatedly attempted standalone TSA funding while blocking broader DHS appropriations they characterize as a blank check for immigration enforcement. Republicans correctly note this severs enforcement from its funding base — exactly the Barrasso-Schumer dynamic we documented on this publication.Senate floor transcript; Congressional Record
Dispute 2 — ICE enforcement conditions. Democrats have conditioned full DHS support on specific restrictions to ICE arrest quotas, prohibited enforcement locations, and warrant requirements. Republicans characterize these as functional nullification of immigration law. The OBBBA pre-funded CBP and ICE to prevent this leverage play but did not resolve the broader dispute.Democratic amendment language; OBBBA provisions
Dispute 3 — Border security provisions. Physical border infrastructure, Title 42 replacement authority, and asylum processing legal frameworks are all embedded in the DHS appropriation. These were unresolved in the prior session and remain so. Neither side will accept the other’s baseline.CBO appropriations analysis; Senate Judiciary Committee markup

“Our cyber security is under attack. Our people are under attack. Our nation is under attack. And we need a full Department of Homeland Security — not piecemeal. All warning lights are flashing red.”

— Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY), Senate Majority Whip, Senate floor
Market Exposure — Shutdown + Iran War Compound Effect
S&P 500
5,698
-0.62% dual headwind
10-Yr Treasury
4.43%
Fiscal deterioration premium
Gold Spot
$2,361
Fiscal + geo safe-haven high
Airlines (AAL/DAL)
Watch
TSA throughput + fuel squeeze
What This Means for Your Portfolio

Airlines are in a double squeeze. WTI at $86+ from Iran risk is already compressing margins. Layer on TSA working under pay stress during peak spring break — elevated call-outs, longer wait times, passenger friction, and reduced bookings. AAL, DAL, UAL, and LUV are all exposed. Watch for any Q1 guidance revision referencing TSA capacity constraints.

The 10-year at 4.43% is a compound signal. Two fiscal pressures are pushing yields simultaneously: Iran war financing ($10B+ in 14 days) and the shutdown-induced GDP drag. The CEA’s $2.5B direct loss figure represents economic activity that would otherwise generate federal revenue. Every week this continues is a week of compounding fiscal deterioration the bond market prices in real time.

Gold at $2,361 is pricing the intersection of three risks: active military operations with uncertain duration, a domestic fiscal crisis with no resolution timeline, and degraded cybersecurity during elevated threat conditions. The gold market has no political incentive to misread them. At $2,361, institutional money is telling you this does not resolve quickly.

The cybersecurity trade is underpriced. CISA at one-third capacity during an active Iran conflict is a documented vulnerability. ✓ CISA Advisory Verified Private cybersecurity firms — CrowdStrike (CRWD), Palo Alto Networks (PANW), Fortinet (FTNT) — are direct beneficiaries of federal security gaps. Every enterprise compensates for reduced federal coverage with increased private spending. This is the documented pattern from every prior period of reduced CISA operational capacity.

Bottom Line

For conservative readers: The OBBBA protected CBP and ICE and that was the right call. But the failure to resolve the broader DHS appropriation has left CISA, TSA, Coast Guard, and FEMA in degraded states with real national security consequences — especially while Operation Epic Fury is active. Republicans winning the immigration fight need to close the CISA and TSA gaps before the next crisis exploits them. The two things are not mutually exclusive.

For investors and economics readers: $93 billion in cumulative shutdown damage is not an abstraction. It is lost GDP, unpaid wages, deferred travel spending, degraded security, and delayed emergency response — all accumulating while an active war adds its own fiscal and market pressure. The compound effect is a material headwind not fully priced into equities. The 10-year and gold are telling you that. Equity has not caught up yet.

The number that should end this shutdown: $93 billion. That is the combined cost of political deadlock over DHS funding. It is more than the entire annual DHS budget. Congress has spent more money failing to fund DHS than it would have cost to fund it twice over. Every day this continues, the meter runs at $1 billion in unpaid wages and $1 billion in travel sector losses. Someone needs to do that math in public and force a vote. We will be here every day until they do.

▸ We Are Tracking These — Come Back Daily
01
Senate DHS appropriations vote — countdown clock — When it is scheduled, we will publish the vote count in real time and identify every member whose district carries direct TSA, FEMA, or Coast Guard exposure.
02
CISA incident reporting during the shutdown window — Any cyberattack on U.S. critical infrastructure during this staffing gap is the defining accountability moment of the shutdown. We monitor CISA advisories daily and will publish any incident report within hours.
03
TSA call-out rate and airport throughput — TSA publishes checkpoint data daily. We are tracking it against pre-shutdown baseline to quantify operational degradation in real time. Any measurable spike publishes same day with airline sector implications.
04
Spring storm season FEMA readiness — April 1 — Tornado season begins. FEMA under current staffing has historically delayed disaster declarations 30–45 days. We will be watching every declared emergency from day one of storm season and reporting the response timeline in real time.

Monday, March 30, 2026

Leavitt to Collins: “You Are Being Disingenuous and You Know It”

▶ Breaking
IranOperation Epic Fury: 6 U.S. service members KIA — president to attend dignified transfer White HouseLeavitt calls Collins “disingenuous” live at briefing — defends Hegseth, cites CNN ratings Oil▲ $86.44  WTI extends gains — Hormuz disruption risk elevated S&P 500▼ 5,712  -0.48% — war premium weighs on risk assets DefenseLMT    RTX    NOC    defense sector outperforms as Iran campaign continues 10-Yr Yield▲ 4.41%  war financing premium pushes Treasuries higher Gold▲ $2,347  safe-haven demand surges to 2-year high CNN RatingsCNN prime time viewership down 34% year-over-year — Nielsen Media Research 2025 CENTCOMIranian ballistic missile sites 60% degraded — operation ongoing day 14 IsraelIDF confirms joint strike coordination with U.S. forces — day 14 of Operation Epic Fury IranOperation Epic Fury: 6 U.S. service members KIA — president to attend dignified transfer White HouseLeavitt calls Collins “disingenuous” live at briefing — defends Hegseth, cites CNN ratings Oil▲ $86.44  WTI extends gains — Hormuz disruption risk elevated S&P 500▼ 5,712  -0.48% — war premium weighs on risk assets DefenseLMT    RTX    NOC    defense sector outperforms as Iran campaign continues 10-Yr Yield▲ 4.41%  war financing premium pushes Treasuries higher Gold▲ $2,347  safe-haven demand surges to 2-year high CNN RatingsCNN prime time viewership down 34% year-over-year — Nielsen Media Research 2025 CENTCOMIranian ballistic missile sites 60% degraded — operation ongoing day 14 IsraelIDF confirms joint strike coordination with U.S. forces — day 14 of Operation Epic Fury


BreakingWhite House BriefingOperation Epic FuryMedia & PressMarkets & Defense

Leavitt to Collins: “You Are Being Disingenuous and You Know It” — The Briefing Room Exchange That Exposed the Media’s Iran War Framing

Six American service members were killed in Operation Epic Fury. The president is attending their dignified transfer. The press briefing should have been about honoring that sacrifice and reporting the mission’s operational progress. Instead, CNN’s Kaitlan Collins turned it into a media bias argument. Karoline Leavitt turned it right back — on the record, with specifics, and without apology.

🏭
VenueWhite House Press Briefing Room
👤
Key PlayersLeavitt (WH) vs. Collins (CNN)
KIA6 U.S. service members
📊
OperationEpic Fury — Day 14

Before analyzing the exchange, the only thing that matters must be stated plainly: six Americans died in service to this country during Operation Epic Fury. The president of the United States will stand on the tarmac at Dover Air Force Base and receive their flag-draped caskets. That is the story. Everything else — the briefing room argument, the CNN framing question, the media bias back-and-forth — is secondary to that fact and should be read as such.

With that established: the exchange between White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt and CNN’s Kaitlan Collins was consequential in its own right, because it exposed in real time the framing choice the press makes when American troops die in a military operation — and because Leavitt named that choice directly, on the record, in the briefing room.

WATCH FULL CLIP


WATCH FULL CLIP

The Mission First — Three Objectives, Day 14

The briefing room fight cannot be understood without understanding what Operation Epic Fury actually is and what it is trying to accomplish. The administration has stated three specific, measurable objectives. Here is where each stands as of the date of this article.

6
U.S. Service Members Killed in Action
Operation Epic Fury — DOD confirmed
60%
Iranian Ballistic Missile Sites Degraded
CENTCOM assessment — day 14
14
Days of Active U.S.–Israel Joint Operations
IDF coordination confirmed
$10B+
Estimated Campaign Cost to Date
Per congressional floor statements
The Three Stated Objectives — Verified Against Official Statements
Objective 1 — Prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. Iran was enriching uranium to 60% purity before the operation commenced — the threshold for weapons-grade material is 90%. ✓ IAEA Verified The administration stated Iran refused a U.S. offer of nuclear fuel for civilian use, demonstrating intent to pursue weapons capability rather than civilian energy. Source: IAEA quarterly report, February 2026; White House statement, pre-strike.IAEA Safeguards Report, Feb 2026; White House press statement
Objective 2 — End funding of Iranian terror proxies. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) provides an estimated $700M–$1B annually to proxy forces including Hezbollah, Hamas, and Houthi militias in Yemen. ✓ U.S. Treasury Verified Degrading the IRGC’s financial and command infrastructure is a stated operational goal. Source: U.S. Treasury IRGC designation filings; Congressional Research Service.U.S. Treasury IRGC sanctions records; CRS Iran terror proxy report 2024
Objective 3 — Eliminate Iran’s ballistic missile delivery capability. Iran’s ballistic missile program is the delivery mechanism for a potential nuclear weapon. CENTCOM reports 60% degradation of identified missile sites as of day 14. The operation is ongoing. Source: CENTCOM briefing; DOD statement.CENTCOM public assessment, March 2026; DOD daily briefing

What Was Actually Said — The Question, the Answer, and the Accusation

Collins opened with a question about Secretary Hegseth’s earlier remarks. Leavitt’s response was immediate, specific, and escalatory. The exchange that followed is worth reading in full because it captures the fundamental tension between a press corps that frames military operations through a political lens and an administration that refuses to accept that frame.

Collins
CNN
Given what Secretary Hegseth said this morning, is it the position of this administration that the press should not prominently cover the deaths of U.S. service members?
Leavitt
WH Press Sec.
“No. It’s the position of this administration that the press should accurately report on the success of Operation Epic Fury and the damage it is doing to the rogue Iranian regime that has threatened the lives of every single American in this room.”

Context: This is a direct counter-frame. Collins’ question assumes Hegseth was trying to suppress coverage of troop deaths. Leavitt reframed it as a call for accurate operational reporting, not censorship. The factual question of what Hegseth actually said that morning is relevant and examined below.
Collins
CNN
He was complaining that it was front page news about these six service members who were killed.
Leavitt
WH Press Sec.
“That’s not what the secretary said, Kaitlan, and that’s not what the secretary meant. And you know it. You are being disingenuous.”

The Hegseth question: Hegseth’s morning remarks at the Pentagon expressed frustration at what he characterized as coverage that emphasizes American casualties without equivalent emphasis on mission progress and strategic rationale. That is a criticism of framing and proportion, not a call to suppress coverage of KIA. Whether Leavitt’s characterization of Collins’ interpretation as disingenuous is accurate is an editorial call. The factual distinction between “don’t cover troop deaths” and “cover the mission accurately” is real and significant.
Collins
CNN
I don’t think covering troops is trying to make the president look bad.
Leavitt
WH Press Sec.
“If you’re trying to argue that CNN’s overwhelming coverage is not negative of President Donald Trump, I think the American people would tend to agree — and your ratings would tend to disagree with that as well.”

The ratings fact: CNN’s prime time viewership declined 34% year-over-year through 2025 per Nielsen Media Research. ✓ Nielsen Verified Whether that decline is attributable to perceived anti-Trump bias, broader cable news cord-cutting, or other factors is analytically contested. The decline itself is not.

“The Iranian regime, if they had their choice, would kill every single person in this room. We can all be very grateful that we have an administration and men and women in our armed forces willing to sacrifice their own lives for the rest of us.”

— Karoline Leavitt, White House Press Secretary, briefing room, March 2026

Two Legitimate Stories — And the Question of Which One Leads

Both things are simultaneously true and both deserve coverage. Six Americans dying in combat is front-page news. It is important, it is tragic, and American families deserve to know the cost of the missions their government undertakes in their name. That is not in dispute.

Also true: if Operation Epic Fury is systematically degrading Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile capability, preventing a nuclear-armed Iran from threatening U.S. allies and assets, and eliminating terror proxy funding — that is also a major story that directly affects every American’s security. The question Leavitt was raising, and the question Hegseth raised that morning, is about proportion and context: does the coverage give readers and viewers the full picture, or does it lead with casualties and minimize strategic progress?

That is a legitimate editorial criticism. It is also an argument that every administration — Democrat and Republican — has made about war coverage since Vietnam. The administration is not wrong to make it. The press is not wrong to cover casualties prominently. The tension between those two truths is the actual story, and it was playing out live in the briefing room.

Market Exposure — Iran Campaign Day 14
WTI Crude Oil
$86.44
Hormuz risk premium escalating
Gold Spot
$2,347
2-year high — safe-haven surge
S&P 500
5,712
-0.48% war premium weighs
10-Yr Treasury
4.41%
War financing supply pressure
What This Means for Your Portfolio

Energy is the primary market expression of this conflict. The Strait of Hormuz handles approximately 20% of global oil supply. ✓ EIA Verified Iranian retaliation against tanker traffic or Hormuz infrastructure is the tail risk that has pushed WTI to $86. A meaningful closure event — even a temporary one — pushes crude toward $100–110 rapidly. Energy sector ETF (XLE) and majors (XOM, CVX, COP) are the direct play. Airlines (AAL, DAL, UAL) are the inverse.

Defense contractors are in active replenishment mode. Day 14 of sustained precision strike operations means Lockheed Martin (LMT), Raytheon (RTX), and Northrop Grumman (NOC) munitions inventories are being drawn down at a pace that triggers automatic replenishment contract triggers. JASSM, JDAM, Tomahawk, and GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator are the key munitions types in play. Watch Q2 guidance for backlog commentary tied to this operation. It will be the most significant defense earnings signal since Ukraine.

Gold at $2,347 is telling you something. The spot price reflects institutional safe-haven demand that is pricing in a longer, more costly campaign than the White House briefings suggest. When the gold market and the press secretary are telling different stories about operational duration, trust the gold market. It has no political incentive to spin.

The 10-year yield at 4.41% reflects war financing reality. A $10B+ campaign in 14 days requires supplemental appropriations. That is new Treasury supply in a market already absorbing a $1.9T annual deficit. The yield is moving for structural reasons, not just Fed policy. Position your fixed income exposure accordingly before the supplemental appropriations request hits the floor.

Bottom Line

For conservative readers: Leavitt did exactly what a press secretary is supposed to do when a reporter mischaracterizes a cabinet secretary’s words — she corrected the record immediately, named the mischaracterization specifically, and did not allow the framing to stand unchallenged. The CNN ratings line was sharp and accurate. But the most important thing she said was the simplest: the Iranian regime would kill every person in that room if it could. That is the context missing from every casualty-first story that does not include the mission rationale.

For investors and economics readers: This is an active war with active market implications. WTI at $86, gold at $2,347, and the 10-year at 4.41% are not noise — they are the market’s real-time verdict on operational duration and fiscal cost. Defense stocks are the structural long. Energy is the geopolitical trade. Treasuries are under structural pressure that does not resolve until either the operation ends or a supplemental appropriation clears. Watch all three simultaneously.

The number that matters most in this article: Six. Six Americans gave their lives in this operation. The president will be on the tarmac at Dover to receive them. Whatever your view of the mission, whatever your view of the media coverage, whatever your view of the briefing room exchange — that number is the one that does not change and the one that deserves to be the first and last thing any American reads about Operation Epic Fury today.

▸ We Are Tracking These — Come Back for Every Development
01
CENTCOM operational updates on missile site degradation — The 60% figure is day 14. We will track every public assessment and publish the updated degradation count as it moves. Objective 3 is the measurable one. Watch it.
02
Hormuz shipping lane data — Iranian retaliation against tanker traffic is the $100 oil scenario. We are monitoring Lloyd’s of London war risk premium data and AIS vessel tracking daily. Any disruption signal will be covered immediately.
03
Defense contractor Q2 earnings guidance — LMT, RTX, and NOC report in April. Munitions replenishment backlog commentary tied to this operation is the most significant forward revenue signal in the defense sector in years. We will have the full breakdown the day each reports.
04
Congressional supplemental appropriations request — $10B+ in 14 days means a supplemental is coming. When the White House sends the request to the Hill, the vote count tells you how much political support this operation actually has. We will cover it from first filing to final vote.

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