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Homepage for The Hill As the federal government shutdown continues into its second month, The Hill says it’s seeing a surge in readership as the digital news brand delivers nonstop coverage from inside the Beltway. According to internal Chartbeat data, the site’s estimated traffic for October was up nearly 50% month-over-month, with shutdown coverage and politics-driven exclusives resulting in millions of page views. To cite just one indicator of reader interest: On the last day of September, with the shutdown looming the next day, The Hill’s number of unique visitors was up 93% compared to the previous day — and a staggering 250% over the previous Tuesday. For now, that data is only a ballpark, as sites like it await the availability of detailed metrics for October in the coming days. That trend shouldn’t come as a surprise, though, with the full data likely to reflect similar bumps in online traffic from publishers like Politico, CNN, and FoxNews.com as audiences continue to seek out reporting on the shutdown’s effects across the country. As for The Hill, specifically, readers coming to it since the shutdown began have found coverage of topics including the shutdown’s impact on federal food aid, which affects the ability of millions of people to pay for groceries; the impact on the National Flood Insurance Program and its ability to issue new policies or renewals; a look at the Food and Drug Administration needing to pause new drug applications; and insight into the operational impact of the shutdown, such as the effect on air traffic controllers who’ve been working without pay. “It’s not surprising that readers seeking information about the government shutdown would turn to The Hill, where we pride ourselves on in-depth, non-partisan coverage of Congress,” said Bill Sammon, SVP of Washington, D.C. editorial content for The Hill and NewsNation. “It also helps that we continue to break exclusive, deeply reported stories that advance the narrative in ways that help readers make sense of what's happening on Capitol Hill.” The site’s recent performance, by the way, comes as 2025 has already been a banner year for the politics-focused news brand. The Hill garnered more than 617 million sites visits, an average of 68.6 million on a monthly basis, between January and September (according to Comscore MMX Multi-platform data). During October alone, The Hill was up almost 50 percent on a pageview basis compared to September, with the site racking up millions of views by the second day of the shutdown. MORE FOR YOU All of that followed a busy, news-filled summer for The Hill — examples of which included the site’s national political reporter Julia Manchester revealing that Congresswoman Elise Stefanik was preparing to launch her campaign for New York governor. Senior politics reporter Amie Parnes, meanwhile, scored two interviews with California Governor Gavin Newsom regarding his thoughts on the direction of the Democratic Party and California’s redistricting battle against President Trump. Parnes also spoke with sources in June who clarified rumors about former Vice President Kamala Harris joining California’s gubernatorial race in 2026. Examples like those and others very much serve as a reminder that politics and especially political gridlock in Washington remain among the most reliable audience magnets in digital media. Traffic spikes like The Hill’s, by the way, also come against the backdrop of a federal shutdown now just days away from breaking the record for the longest in U.S. history — that previous record being the 35-day shutdown during the first Trump administration, lasting from Dec. 22, 2018, to Jan. 25, 2019. Editorial StandardsReprints & Permissions