‘Mystery Man’ Who Donated $1
As the shutdown grinds on, the clash in Washington isn’t just about budgets — it’s about who actually pays the price.
Essential federal workers and military families are left in limbo while politicians posture on television, trading blame and rehearsed outrage.
Into that vacuum steps Timothy Mellon, a camera-shy billionaire whose fortune and
past generosity suggest he could keep paychecks flowing when government refuses to do its job.
Yet even his staggering offer runs into the hard wall of federal law.
The Antideficiency Act, designed to stop agencies from spending unapproved money, now threatens to trap Mellon’s donation in bureaucratic amber.
It’s a bitter irony: a private citizen is willing to do what Congress will not, but the system may not let him.
In the end, the real test is whether Washington can look past partisan warfare long enough to honor the people it sends into harm’s way.