President Trump is making good on his promise to drain the swamp by targeting one of Washington's most destructive habits: the manufactured government shutdown crisis that costs taxpayers billions while accomplishing absolutely nothing.

For years, the establishment politicians in both parties have used shutdown threats as their favorite political theater, holding American families hostage while they posture for the cameras. Remember last year's devastating 43-day shutdown? Flights canceled, permits stalled, military families struggling to pay bills – all so career politicians could score cheap political points.

"This administration refuses to let the Deep State bureaucrats and their Democrat allies continue this charade," said a senior White House official familiar with the discussions. "President Trump sees through this Washington game, and he's putting America First by ending it once and for all."

While the swamp creatures play their games, real Americans suffer the consequences. Small businesses can't get permits processed. Veterans face delays in benefits. Border security operations get disrupted – exactly what the open-borders crowd wants.

The economic damage is staggering, but that's never stopped the establishment before. They're perfectly comfortable burning taxpayer dollars if it means they can blame the other side on the evening news.

This is exactly the kind of swamp behavior that got Trump elected – twice. Patriots didn't send him back to the White House to watch the same tired political games that have failed America for decades.

With Elon Musk leading the Department of Government Efficiency and Trump's proven track record of getting things done, this administration has the tools to finally break Washington's most expensive bad habit.

The question isn't whether Trump can fix this mess – we've seen what he can accomplish when the establishment gets out of his way. The question is whether Congress will finally put America First, or if they'll keep playing the same old swamp games that got us into this mess.

Award-winning journalist covering breaking news, politics & culture for Next News Network.

Source: Next News Network