Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q5589429> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 78 of
78
with 100 triples per page.
- Q5589429 subject Q8495975.
- Q5589429 abstract "In U.S. politics, a government shutdown is the process the Executive Branch must enter into when the Congress creates a "funding gap" by choosing not to or failing to pass legislation funding government operations and agencies, or, after the Congress passes a bill to fund the government and sends it to the President, the President vetoes that bill. If interim or full-year appropriations are not enacted into law, the United States Constitution and the Antideficiency Act require the federal government begins a "shutdown" of the affected activities. If the funding gap lasts long enough that shutdown plans must be enacted, the law requires the furlough of non-essential personnel and curtailment of agency activities and services. Programs that are funded by laws other than annual appropriations acts (like Social Security) also may be affected by a funding gap, if program execution relies on activities that receive annually appropriated funding. Although the term government shutdown usually refers to what occurs at the federal level, shutdowns have also occurred at the state/territorial and local levels of government.During Gerald Ford's presidency, one funding gap occurred, lasting 10 days. Under the Carter administrations, funding gaps caused 5 partial shutdowns that affected only the departments of Labor and Health, Education, and Welfare. These lasted from 8 to 18 days and the primary issue of dispute was federal funding for abortion. During the Reagan administration, there were funding gaps with technical shutdowns lasting less than 48 hours or over weekends while spending measures were negotiated rendering them to be of negligible effect. A funding gap during the George H. W. Bush administration also caused a weekend shutdown, resolved late the following Monday.During the Clinton administration, there were two full government shutdowns during 1995 and 1996 lasting 5 and 21 days respectively, both the longest and most severe to that date. These shutdowns led to massive furloughs and significant disruption. The primary issue was the United States budget deficit.During Barack Obama's presidency, the United States federal government shutdown of 2013 ran from October 1 to 16, 2013. The primary issue of dispute between the Republican-controlled House of Representatives and the Democratic Senate was the Republicans' desire to delay or defund the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Obamacare), signed into law in 2010. A bill to end the shutdown and fund federal agencies through January 15, 2014 passed the Senate and the House and was signed into law on October 17, 2013. Standard & Poor's, the financial ratings agency, stated on October 16 that the shutdown "to date has taken $24 billion out of the economy," and "shaved at least 0.6 percent off annualized fourth-quarter 2013 GDP growth."".
- Q5589429 thumbnail Closed_lawn_of_National_Mall_with_US_Capitol_in_background;_Washington,_DC;_2013-10-06.JPG?width=300.
- Q5589429 wikiPageExternalLink RL34680.pdf.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q11209.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q1124.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q1125952.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q1125991.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q11268.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q1138777.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q114843.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q11696.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q11698.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q11701.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q128831.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q1384.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q1393367.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q1414593.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q15015307.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q1501998.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q15076618.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q1566674.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q1591198.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q16152667.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q166747.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q16821677.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q16823357.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q16833703.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q16987354.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q16987361.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q17507642.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q178074.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q187021.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q20203109.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q231672.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q23505.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q23685.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q2395536.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q2824547.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q2824550.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q2824573.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q283681.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q284392.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q286810.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q3020646.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q3075260.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q330963.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q351552.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q35798.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q3697301.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q4606695.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q4621852.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q4774669.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q5165404.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q5251558.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q5454395.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q5589415.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q5611382.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q628807.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q633760.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q6517426.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q66096.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q7236582.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q7451826.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q76.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q7689573.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q7810038.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q7883083.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q7892485.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q8495975.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q907752.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q928670.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q942326.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q9582.
- Q5589429 wikiPageWikiLink Q9960.
- Q5589429 comment "In U.S. politics, a government shutdown is the process the Executive Branch must enter into when the Congress creates a "funding gap" by choosing not to or failing to pass legislation funding government operations and agencies, or, after the Congress passes a bill to fund the government and sends it to the President, the President vetoes that bill.".
- Q5589429 label "Government shutdown in the United States".
- Q5589429 depiction Closed_lawn_of_National_Mall_with_US_Capitol_in_background;_Washington,_DC;_2013-10-06.JPG.