All 50 States Will See Devastating Economic Hit In Democrat Shutdown

The White House

As Democrats hold the government hostage over their push to fund free healthcare for illegal aliens, the Council of Economic Advisers warns the U.S. could lose $15 billion in GDP each week the government is shut down - a crisis that will ripple across every state.

New data underscores the nationwide fallout - with all 50 states likely to face job losses, reduced consumer spending, and disruptions to vital programs like WIC and SNAP. The White House's updated shutdown website highlights the staggering cost of Democrats' recklessness with new state-by-state analyses, revealing a crisis that punishes American families.

A monthlong shutdown may mean 43,000+ more unemployed Americans.

StateEst. Increase in
Alaska100
Alabama600
Arkansas400
Arizona1,000
California5,100
Colorado900
Connecticut500
Delaware100
Florida2,900
Georgia1,400
Hawaii200
Iowa500
Idaho300
Illinois1,700
Indiana900
Kansas400
Kentucky500
Louisiana500
Massachusetts1,000
Maryland800
Maine200
Michigan1,300
Minnesota800
Missouri800
Mississippi300
Montana200
North Carolina1,400
North Dakota100
Nebraska300
New Hampshire200
New Jersey1,300
New Mexico300
Nevada400
New York2,600
Ohio1,500
Oklahoma500
Oregon600
Pennsylvania1,700
Rhode Island200
South Carolina700
South Dakota100
Tennessee900
Texas4,100
Utah500
Virginia1,200
Vermont100
Washington1,000
Wisconsin800
West Virginia200
Wyoming100

Women and children in need could lose access to their critical WIC benefits.

StateWIC Recipients
Alaska14,000
Alabama112,000
Arkansas63,000
Arizona153,000
California996,000
Colorado93,000
Connecticut51,000
Delaware23,000
Florida421,000
Georgia231,000
Hawaii25,000
Iowa62,000
Idaho31,000
Illinois169,000
Indiana152,000
Kansas48,000
Kentucky105,000
Louisiana99,000
Massachusetts123,000
Maryland153,000
Maine18,000
Michigan189,000
Minnesota101,000
Missouri94,000
Mississippi61,000
Montana14,000
North Carolina238,000
North Dakota10,000
Nebraska36,000
New Hampshire12,000
New Jersey162,000
New Mexico41,000
Nevada55,000
New York438,000
Ohio179,000
Oklahoma100,000
Oregon78,000
Pennsylvania182,000
Rhode Island18,000
South Carolina99,000
South Dakota15,000
Tennessee138,000
Texas784,000
Utah46,000
Virginia107,000
Vermont10,000
Washington135,000
Wisconsin92,000
West Virginia36,000
Wyoming8,000

Consumer spending will fall as a result of lost wages from furloughed workers and reduced federal contract spending.

StateEst. Consumer Spending
Alaska$185 million
Alabama$715 million
Arkansas$169 million
Arizona$786 million
California$3.2 billion
Colorado$717 million
Connecticut$581 million
Delaware$52 million
Florida$1.7 billion
Georgia$1 billion
Hawaii$349 million
Iowa$177 million
Idaho$153 million
Illinois$846 million
Indiana$384 million
Kansas$236 million
Kentucky$457 million
Louisiana$304 million
Massachusetts$686 million
Maryland$2.4 billion
Maine$193 million
Michigan$563 million
Minnesota$295 million
Missouri$655 million
Mississippi$333 million
Montana$117 million
North Carolina$681 million
North Dakota$75 million
Nebraska$155 million
New Hampshire$103 million
New Jersey$559 million
New Mexico$439 million
Nevada$224 million
New York$1.2 billion
Ohio$806 million
Oklahoma$451 million
Oregon$263 million
Pennsylvania$1.2 billion
Rhode Island$113 million
South Carolina$434 million
South Dakota$96 million
Tennessee$635 million
Texas$3.1 billion
Utah$383 million
Virginia$3.6 billion
Vermont$61 million
Washington$843 million
Wisconsin$295 million
West Virginia$227 million
Wyoming$62 million

Like national GDP, state GDP (Gross State Product) is expected to decline.

StateEst. Gross State Product
Alaska$37 million
Alabama$169 million
Arkansas$98 million
Arizona$296 million
California$2.1 billion
Colorado$289 million
Connecticut$186 million
Delaware$58 million
Florida$911 million
Georgia$458 million
Hawaii$62 million
Iowa$137 million
Idaho$67 million
Illinois$596 million
Indiana$270 million
Kansas$119 million
Kentucky$152 million
Louisiana$168 million
Massachusetts$407 million
Maryland$282 million
Maine$51 million
Michigan$361 million
Minnesota$264 million
Missouri$232 million
Mississippi$82 million
Montana$41 million
North Carolina$442 million
North Dakota$41 million
Nebraska$98 million
New Hampshire$62 million
New Jersey$440 million
New Mexico$76 million
Nevada$140 million
New York$1.2 billion
Ohio$478 million
Oklahoma$136 million
Oregon$170 million
Pennsylvania$523 million
Rhode Island$42 million
South Carolina$188 million
South Dakota$40 million
Tennessee$292 million
Texas$1.4 billion
Utah$157 million
Virginia$396 million
Vermont$24 million
Washington$445 million
Wisconsin$234 million
West Virginia$54 million
Wyoming$26 million

SNAP benefits could face disruption after 30 days.

StateSNAP Recipients
Alaska66,000
Alabama736,000
Arkansas240,000
Arizona887,000
California5,494,000
Colorado615,000
Connecticut364,000
Delaware118,000
Florida2,943,000
Georgia1,356,000
Hawaii164,000
Iowa267,000
Idaho134,000
Illinois1,880,000
Indiana586,000
Kansas186,000
Kentucky595,000
Louisiana804,000
Massachusetts1,076,000
Maryland668,000
Maine164,000
Michigan1,474,000
Minnesota452,000
Missouri656,000
Mississippi357,000
Montana81,000
North Carolina1,378,000
North Dakota57,000
Nebraska151,000
New Hampshire76,000
New Jersey826,000
New Mexico458,000
Nevada497,000
New York2,963,000
Ohio1,451,000
Oklahoma692,000
Oregon773,000
Pennsylvania1,958,000
Rhode Island143,000
South Carolina568,000
South Dakota75,000
Tennessee691,000
Texas3,455,000
Utah177,000
Virginia825,000
Vermont65,000
Washington905,000
Wisconsin689,000
West Virginia274,000
Wyoming27,000
/Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.