Breaking: GOP Wins Shutdown Showdown as Enough Democrats Defect to Re-Open Government
Eight
Democrat-caucusing senators broke from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s
demand to restore Obamacare subsidies and voted Sunday night to reopen the U.S.
government after a shutdown that began on Oct. 1.
The deal,
the Washington Times reported, would keep the government
funded through January. While it doesn’t offer a promise that the Obamacare
subsidies would be retained, a vote would be held next month under the
agreement.
The Senate deal replaces a continuing resolution bill
passed by the House on Sept. 19, requiring the House to come back into session
and return to Washington to vote on replacing it.
If the votes
are there in the lower chamber, that means that — at the earliest — the
government would reopen on Tuesday or Wednesday.
The 60-40
vote Sunday night, passed a little before 11 p.m. Eastern, garnered seven votes
from Democrats and one from a Democrat-caucusing independent. One Republican —
libertarian-leaning Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky — voted against the deal.
Sixty votes
were needed to pass a resolution without the so-called “nuclear option,” which
would likely have meant the end of the filibuster as we know it.
Of the
Democrats who voted for it: Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada,
Dick Durbin of Illinois, John Fetterman of Pennsylvania, Maggie Hassan of New
Hampshire, Tim Kaine of Virginia, Jackie Rosen of Nevada, and Jeanne Shaheen of
New Hampshire.
Independent Sen. Angus King of Maine, who caucuses
with Democrats, similarly voted to keep the government open.
Trump was
optimistic before the vote was taken: “It looks like we’re getting very close
to the shutdown ending,” he said before the vote.
Shaheen, the
lead negotiator for the Democrats who broke from Schumer, was more realistic
about what it meant.
“This was
the only deal on the table,” she said. “It was our best chance to reopen the
government and immediately begin negotiations” on the Obamacare subsidies.
Furthermore,
a clause in the spending package would not only rehire government workers laid
off by the Trump administration during the shutdown but provide them with back
pay. Those who have been furloughed or working without a paycheck will also, as
per usual, receive their salaries once the government reopens.
There is
still one major hurdle: The bill needs to pass the House, where the GOP has a
slim majority. And, while there was a willingness of some Democrats to work
with the GOP to reopen the government without the subsidies in place, Senate
Minority Leader Schumer and others made it clear they found the deal
unacceptable.
“I have been
clear on this from the beginning: I will not turn my back on the 24 million
Americans who will see their premiums more than double if we don’t extend these
tax credits,” Arizona Sen. Ruben Gallego said on social media.
Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy — considered an outsider
possibility for the party’s 2028 presidential nomination — also posted a video
to X in which he condemned those who joined the GOP in the vote.
Related:
Every
Parent Knows Why Republicans Cannot Give In to the Democrat Shutdown Tantrum
“There’s no
way to sugarcoat what happened tonight.
And my fear
is that Trump gets stronger, not weaker, because of this acquiescence,” he said
in a caption to the video.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, a New York Democrat,
also made clear that the new package would face opposition in the House.
“For seven
weeks, Democrats in the House and Senate have waged a valiant
fight on
behalf of the American people,” he wrote in a statement.
“It now
appears that the Senate Republicans will send the House of
Representatives
a spending bill that fails to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits.”
He also
attempted to pin the Democrats’ failure to reopen the government or renegotiate
the tax credits — COVID-19 expanded benefits that cap out-of-pocket costs at
8.5 percent of household income for families earning less than 400 percent of
the poverty level — on the White House.
“Donald
Trump and the Republican Party own the toxic mess they have created in our own
country and the American people know it,” Jeffries said.
Polling has been mixed, however, and hasn’t generally found
that the American public blames Trump for the shutdown:
However,
the Democrats did score larger-than-expected victories in
off-year elections in states which tend to be blue strongholds. Particularly in
Virginia, where a large number of federal employees live in the Washington,
D.C., suburbs, the shutdown seemed to work to the Democrats’ advantage.
In the days
leading up to the election, and just hours before polls closed, reports began to emerge that Senate Democrats were
leaning toward working with the GOP to end the shutdown.
Whatever the
case, Schumer made it clear he was going to fight against the bill even after
it was clear it had the votes to pass.
“This
healthcare crisis is so severe, so urgent, so devastating for families back
home that I cannot, in good faith, support this CR that fails to address the
healthcare crisis,” Schumer said, according to Fox News, adding the Republicans “showed that they are
against any health care reform.”
It’s also
unclear what the vote will mean for Schumer’s future as minority leader. While
he reenergized the liberal base with his hard-line negotiating tactics, his
failure to shut down the government in response to another continuing
resolution in the spring almost cost him his job, with several high-profile left-wing activist groups calling
for him to step aside or be forced out.
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