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The current federal government shutdown is on Day 8 as of the date of this post. The section of the Government Accountability Office (GAO) that handles bid protests is included in the portion of the government that is currently shutdown. The GAO has stated on its website that because of the shutdown, certain timeliness rules for filing bid protests will be suspended (also known as tolled) until the GAO reopens. If the shutdown continues to and beyond 10 days, whenever the government resumes full operations there may be a deluge of protests filed all on the same day, as that will be 10 days from the end of fiscal year (FY) 2025 and some protests must be filed within 10 days of when a contractor knew or should have known of the grounds to protest. It is not implausible that some agencies may become so overwhelmed with protests when the federal government reopens that they will have to triage their litigation resources. In such a scenario, agencies may become more inclined to take corrective action, if only because there is a colorable basis to take corrective action and the agency lacks resources to defend that protest. 

With respect to whether there could be a spike in protests followed by an increase in corrective actions, consider the following:

  • The federal government workforce has been significantly reduced, with more reductions threatened as the shutdown continues, leaving parts of the federal government under-resourced compared to prior years.
  • While it is not known to what degree (if any) the FY 2026 Federal Budget will be reduced compared to FY 2025, recent attempts at recission of unspent funds suggests there will be budget cuts.
  • Budget cuts would suggest there will be fewer federal awards made in FY 2026 than 2025.
  • Contractors with grounds to protest awards they lost towards the close of FY 2025 may be more incentivized to protest to try to secure the opportunities they just missed out on rather than to hope for future opportunities to materialize.
  • Depending on how long the shutdown lasts, contractors may have more time than usual to prepare their protests.
  • Contractors that do not protest are usually excluded from the opportunity to participate in corrective action. 

While there is no guarantee that there will be a spike in the number of bid protests filed when the federal government reopens or a corresponding increase in corrective actions, government contractors considering filing protests may want to prepare for this possibility.  This is especially true for contractors who may have been on the fence about protesting before the shutdown as the calculus for protesting may be different when the government reopens. 

If you would like to discuss whether it may make sense for your company to protest an award decision, please feel free to contact Aron Beezley,  Nathaniel Greeson, or Eugene Benick.

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Photo of Aron C. Beezley Aron C. Beezley

Aron Beezley is the co-leader of Bradley’s nationally ranked Government Contracts Practice Group. Ranked nationally himself in Government Contracts Law by ChambersLaw360Benchmark Litigation, and Super Lawyers, Aron’s vast experience includes representation of government contractors in numerous industries…

Aron Beezley is the co-leader of Bradley’s nationally ranked Government Contracts Practice Group. Ranked nationally himself in Government Contracts Law by ChambersLaw360Benchmark Litigation, and Super Lawyers, Aron’s vast experience includes representation of government contractors in numerous industries and in all aspects of the government-contracting process, including negotiation, award, performance and termination.

Photo of Nathaniel J. Greeson Nathaniel J. Greeson

Nathaniel Greeson helps clients solve government contracts challenges. Nathaniel represents clients in a range of government procurement issues, including bid protests, claims, disputes, audits and investigations. He has extensive experience with GAO bid protests, agency-level protests, Court of Federal Claims (COFC) bid protests…

Nathaniel Greeson helps clients solve government contracts challenges. Nathaniel represents clients in a range of government procurement issues, including bid protests, claims, disputes, audits and investigations. He has extensive experience with GAO bid protests, agency-level protests, Court of Federal Claims (COFC) bid protests, and SBA OHA size and NAICS appeals, as well as experience with agency-level requests for equitable adjustments (REA) and claims, and Boards of Contract Appeals claims. View articles by Nathaniel.

Photo of Eugene J. Benick Eugene J. Benick

Eugene Benick is a government contracts attorney with extensive experience in bid protests, requests for equitable adjustments and claims, and resolving organizational conflict of interests. He also is well versed with the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), the Federal Tort Claims Act, federal…

Eugene Benick is a government contracts attorney with extensive experience in bid protests, requests for equitable adjustments and claims, and resolving organizational conflict of interests. He also is well versed with the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), the Federal Tort Claims Act, federal debt collection, foreign litigation, and complex litigation.