Donald Trump’s government shutdown is now in its 18th day. In that time, 800,000 federal workers have gone without pay, and vulnerable Americans have been cut off from medicine, water, and groceries. Now, as this thing drags out, food stamps for roughly 38 million people are at risk of being sharply reduced. The president has already said he couldn’t care less if federal employees go unpaid, as they’re “mostly” Democrats, and presumably that view extends to whether or not people lose their food stamps. But are there any constituents being negatively impacted by the shutdown that he’d rather not piss off?

In fact, it turns out there are! Per The New York Times, they include:

The Secret Service, where 6,000 (out of roughly 7,000) officers are currently working without pay. (“Morale is a serious issue,” Donald Mihalek, a 20-year veteran told the Times. “This is an incredibly stressful job that requires your full attention, and if you are standing there thinking about your mortgage, or your credit card bills, or the fact that you are burning through your savings, you are distracted, you [are] not able to give 100 percent.”)

Farmers who were going to apply for subsidies to help offset the damaging effect of Trump’s trade war, but who now have to wait to get paid until the Agriculture Department’s Farm Service Agency offices reopen.

People trying to obtain mortgages (due to reduced staffing, “as many as 39,000 federally backed mortgage applications may have already been delayed”).

Wall Street, which can’t move ahead with corporate mergers or initial public offerings that require approval from regulators, whose shutdown status has also paused offerings that midsize public companies rely on for cash. (Want to know who’s not hurt by the Securities and Exchange Commission operating with just a handful of employees? People currently committing financial crimes, as “pending investigations in securities violations have ground to a halt.”)

Central bankers, who may struggle to make interest rate decisions thanks to the delayed release of “key economic data, like new home sales and durable goods orders.”

Craft brewers, who can’t get approval for new beer labels from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Manufacturers taking a hit from Trump’s trade war, who cannot submit requests for tariff exemptions from the Commerce Department.

U.S. economic growth, which Bank of America Merrill Lynch predicted Monday would take a 10th of a percent hit (and counting).

It’s not clear if the president plans to pay lip service to these groups during tonight’s prime-time address, ignore them entirely, or tell them to suck it up in service to his useless border wall. Stay tuned!