Here’s what you need to know about the mess unfolding in Washington right now. A surveillance program that literally helped prevent a terror attack on Taylor Swift’s concert is about to expire because Democrats decided their feelings about Bill Pulte matter more than keeping Americans safe. Let that sink in for a second.

Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act died at 12:01 a.m. Saturday after both chambers of Congress failed to pass even a three-week extension. The House vote wasn’t even close. It failed 198-218, falling short of the two-thirds majority needed under the suspension process Speaker Mike Johnson used to fast-track the measure. Over in the Senate, Tom Cotton tried to push it through but Ron Wyden blocked it cold.

The whole thing collapsed because House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and his Democratic colleagues threw a tantrum over Trump’s appointment of Pulte as acting director of national intelligence. They’re holding national security hostage until Trump reverses course. Think about the absurdity here. We’re talking about a program that gives our intelligence community the ability to monitor foreign threats, catch terrorists before they strike, and protect American lives. But sure, let’s let it die because we don’t like one personnel decision.

You know what this reminds me of? It’s like watching someone refuse to call the fire department because they don’t like the new fire chief. The house is still burning either way.

Section 702 isn’t some abstract legal concept that only matters to policy wonks and intelligence nerds. This is the tool that stopped a planned massacre at a Taylor Swift concert. Real people, real lives, real threats. The program allows intelligence agencies to surveil non-Americans located outside the United States without getting individual warrants. It’s targeted, it’s effective, and it’s been reauthorized multiple times because it works.

Johnson tried to do the right thing. He put up a clean extension with no changes to the law, just three weeks to give Congress breathing room to negotiate something longer term. He used the suspension process, which is typically reserved for noncontroversial measures that need quick passage. The problem is Democrats decided this was their hill to die on.

The irony burns hot enough to melt steel. Democrats have spent years lecturing Republicans about the importance of national security, about not politicizing intelligence work, about respecting our institutions. Now they’re willing to let a critical surveillance program expire because they’re mad about Pulte. The hypocrisy is almost impressive in its brazenness.

And here’s the kicker. Congress just skipped town. They’re gone. The World Cup is coming, everyone’s got places to be, and meanwhile we’ve got a gaping hole in our national security infrastructure. Johnson made it clear he wasn’t keeping the House in session past the deadline. So now what? We’re supposed to just hope nothing bad happens while our elected officials sort out their personal grievances?

This is what happens when politics trumps common sense. When partisan warfare becomes more important than protecting the homeland. When Democrats would rather score points against Trump than ensure our intelligence community has the tools it needs to keep us safe. It’s reckless, it’s dangerous, and frankly it’s disgraceful.

Related: Republican Congressman Demands IRS Strip Southern Poverty Law Center of Tax Exempt Status