With just weeks to go before Washington runs out of money at the end of this month, perennial threats of a federal government shutdown “might really happen this time,” said Ed Kilgore at New York magazine. Despite being just a “couple of weeks away from the fish-or-cut-bait moment,” lawmakers from both parties are “not even negotiating over a temporary, much less permanent, resolution.”
While Republicans “brush back Democratic demands” to spare health care from spending cuts, Democrats are “flexing a newfound willingness to play hardball” and risk a closure, said ABC News. Republicans are “daring Democrats to vote against a 50-day spending stopgap” that includes additional funds for congressional security, said Axios. The measure is a “total partisan proposal,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.).
Trump has meanwhile urged his party to “write a funding bill on their own” and “cut Democrats out of the process” of crafting a continuing resolution entirely, said NBC News. According to congressional Democrats, their conservative colleagues are “following Trump’s wishes and are refusing to negotiate, making a shutdown likelier.”
Within the GOP, however, there are signs that the unified front may be weaker than conservatives like to project. “I can’t wait to see” how voting for a continuing resolution “becomes a Trump loyalty test,” said Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) on X. “In all actual reality, it’s a disloyalty to him by passing a Biden policy-laden omnibus” that will ultimately leave Trump a “temporary president with temporary policies.” |