Schumer refuses to rule out caving to Trump in government shutdown fight
WASHINGTON — Dem Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer on Sunday refused to rule out caving to President Trump’s demand for a “clean” stopgap funding bill — no poison pills attached — to avert a partial federal shutdown.
The senior New York senator and most other Democrats in the chamber had rejected a “clean” GOP-backed House bill Friday to keep the government’s lights on. Instead, they backed their own bill that would have averted a partial shutdown while achieving their demands on health care and restricting Trump’s ability to freeze funding.
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But Schumer, pressed Sunday about whether he would be on board with the Republicans’ “clean” spending patch if time runs out, to avoid a shutdown, would not deny the possibility.
“Look, we hope it doesn’t come to that,” Schumer told CNN’s “State of the Union.” “The American people are on our side by almost 2 to 1.”
When host Dana Bash pressed him again for a direct answer, Schumer only said, “We are hoping that [Trump] will negotiate with us, and so far he hasn’t.”
Bash said Schumer’s non-answers to her question “sounded like a yes” to her– meaning he would not vote for a “clean” bill to avert a partial shutdown without concessions.
She gave him the chance to confirm that — but Schumer did not.
Instead, he said, “The bottom line is we must get a better bill than what they had the last time.”
Congress has a deadline of Sept. 30 at 11:59 p.m. to pass some sort of government funding measure or else face a partial shutdown.
That’s because every new fiscal year, which starts Oct. 1, Congress is required to fund the government.
The GOP-led House approved its proposed stopgap — known as a continuing resolution — Friday without most Dems’ help to keep the government’s lights on through Nov. 21.
The Senate then voted on both the GOP CR and the Democratic one to avert a partial shutdown. Both failed.
While Republicans have a majority in both chambers, they need Democratic votes in the Senate to overcome the 60-vote threshold needed to break a filibuster.
In March, Schumer faced a revolt among his progressive base for declining to block a GOP-backed continuing resolution to avert a partial shutdown at the time. The backlash included open calls for him to face a primary in 2028.
“The situation is a lot different now than it was then,” Schumer insisted Sunday. “This is a demand from the American people across the board.”
Both Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) have publicly demanded concessions from Republicans on healthcare funding.
They’ve indicated that Democrats want Republicans to help them prevent the expiration of the beefed-up Affordable Care Act subsidies, which are set to run out at the end of 2025, reverse Medicaid reforms in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act — which Republicans now call the Working Families Tax Cut Act — and restore public health research funding.
Schumer and Jeffries have also sought a meeting with Trump to discuss their demands. While Trump has implored Republicans to back a “clean” continuing resolution, he’s conveyed openness to meeting with the two top Democrats, though nothing has been scheduled.
“I’d love to meet with them, but I don’t think it’s going to have any impact,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Sunday.
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