Politics

Senate Democrats Officially Surrender as Shutdown Deal Passes

BENDING THE KNEE

The Senate Democrats who joined Republicans to pass the bill are facing intense backlash.

A photo illustration of Sen. Chuck Schumer waving a white flag in front of the Capitol building.
Photo Illustration by Thomas Levinson/The Daily Beast/Getty

The Senate voted on Monday evening to end the record-long government shutdown despite intense backlash to Democratic senators who caved to reach the deal.

The passage of the short-term spending bill to fund the government through January is the latest in several steps toward reopening the government as the shutdown hit Day 41.

In the end, eight Democratic senators joined with Republicans for the 60 to 40 vote on the legislation after paving the way for the final vote late Sunday.

In return for ending the standoff, Democrats were promised a vote on healthcare in the Senate. However their push for Congress to extend the expiring enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies already appears to be dead on arrival in the House before the bill even goes before the Senate.

Eight Democratic senators caved and joined Republicans paving the way to end the record-long government shutdown.
Eight Democratic senators caved and joined Republicans paving the way to end the record-long government shutdown. Anna Rose Layden/Anna Rose Layden/Getty Images

Democratic congressional candidates across the political spectrum, House members and progressive groups are furious that Democrats agreed to nothing more than a Senate promise and have called for heads.

Despite voting “no” on moving the legislation forward, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is facing calls to step down and for primary challengers.

While most of his own caucus has refrained from bashing his leadership outright, the frustration on the hill was on full display as the majority of Senate Democrats voted to continue the fight.

Asked point blank whether Schumer should lead Senate Democrats moving forward, Senator Mark Kelly of Arizona sidestepped the question on Monday.

A petition on Change.org for him to step down hit nearly 50,000 signatures on Monday.

House Speaker Mike Johnson said he was calling his members back to Washington, D.C., as soon as possible on Monday, so they could vote on the new spending deal for the government to reopen this week.

The House has not held a vote since Sept. 19 and has been on recess for seven weeks as Johnson refused to bring them back to town until the Senate took action.

The speaker did not take questions from the press on Monday during his daily news conference about whether he would hold a vote on the healthcare bill promised to Senate Democrats.

Asked if he would even give the Senate healthcare bill a vote in the House, Johnson remained noncommittal on Monday evening.

“We’re going to do in the House what we always do, and that is a deliberative process,” he said.

House Speaker Mike Johnson have House members 36 hours to get back to Washington, DC so they could vote on the Senate bill to end the government shutdown, but he would not commit to bringing a bill on the Affordable Care Act up for a vote in the House should it pass in the Senate.
House Speaker Mike Johnson gave House members 36 hours to get back to D.C. so they could vote on the Senate bill. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

He also threw cold water on Democrats’ push to extend the enhanced Obamacare tax credits to prevent health care costs from skyrocketing at the end of the year during an interview with Fox Business.

“Subsidizing the insurance companies is not the answer because it just drives the cost up even further, so we need to look at the root causes,” Johnson said.

Republicans have repeatedly claimed they have their own ideas to address the rising cost of healthcare, but they have yet to make any plan public.

The speaker said they have to bring down the cost while also increasing access and quality of care and claimed they had “notebooks full of ideas on how to do that.”

However, it’s not just Democrats who have been skeptical. MAGA Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene has blasted her own party leadership in recent weeks and accused them of not having a plan to tackle the issue.

In a separate interview on Monday, Johnson was asked point-blank if their plan to address healthcare would go into effect at the end of the year when costs are set to skyrocket.

The speaker gave another vague answer of their ideas and said they have November and December to work on it.

Trump famously said during the 2024 presidential debate that he had “concepts of a plan” to address healthcare but never provided details. He also never released a comprehensive healthcare plan he promised during the 2020 election after his effort to overturn Obamacare failed during his first term.

The president has refused to negotiate with Democrats throughout the entire 40-plus days of the shutdown so far.

President Donald Trump praised the Senate deal to end the government shutdown on Monday and suggested Republicans have their own ideas to fix health care, but he offered no details on how they would address the looming cliff at the end of the year.
President Donald Trump praised the Senate deal to end the government shutdown on Monday and suggested Republicans have their own ideas to fix health care, but he offered no details on how they would address the looming cliff at the end of the year. Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images

On Monday, while speaking in the Oval Office, the president praised the deal reached in the Senate as “very good.”

“We want a healthcare system where we pay the money to the people instead of the insurance companies, and I tell you, we’re going to be working on that very hard over the next short period of time where the people get the money,” he declared.

While House Democrats remain largely united against the Senate plan, they do not have the votes to block it, should House Republicans remain united.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries slammed Republicans on healthcare during his own press conference on Monday and vowed to keep fighting.

“We’re going to continue the fight to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits, and if it doesn’t happen this week, next week, this month, next month, then it’s the fault of Donald Trump and House and Senate Republicans,” he said.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said House Democrats would continue to fight to extend the enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies, but he did not join calls for Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer to step aside amid backlash over the Senate deal.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said House Democrats would continue to fight to extend the enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies. Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

If the tax credits expire, out-of-pocket premiums are estimated to increase by 114 percent on average next year, according to an analysis from the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF).

A whopping 74 percent of Americans support the enhanced ACA subsidies being extended, including 76 percent of Independents and 50 percent of Republicans, according to KFF’s poll.