
Democrats wrestle with shutdown strategy
After Vought told reporters Thursday that 'the appropriations process has to be less bipartisan,' Collins urged fellow appropriators that 'the best way for us to counter what has been said by the OMB director is to continue to work in a bipartisan way. And I hope that we are going to do so.'
But Democrats need more than just Collins to come to the defense of Congress' funding prerogative.
'We've got to work to make sure that there are several others on the other side of the aisle who have the stomach and the strength and the spine to stand up and say: 'No, don't take it away from the Congress. It's our job,'' Connecticut Rep. Rosa DeLauro, the House's top Democratic appropriator, told reporters Thursday night before the House passed the package to nix $9 billion.
Democrats also need to help boost the legal fights against Trump's funding moves, DeLauro added, as more than 100 of those lawsuits play out in courtrooms throughout the country.
As Democrats hope for a critical mass of Republicans willing to defy Trump, some are testing out a more hardline position of warning Republicans they could have to go at it alone in a funding fight this fall. In a joint statement after House Republicans cleared Trump's recessions package just after midnight Friday, the House's top three Democrats fired off a warning shot that pinned the onus on Republicans to avoid a funding lapse in the coming months.
'Tonight's vote, coming hours after the Trump White House abandoned the bipartisan appropriations process, makes it clear that House Republicans are determined to march this country toward a painful government shutdown later this year,' said Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, Minority Whip Kathrine Clark and Democratic Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar.
And Schumer said in a letter to his caucus earlier this month that Republicans 'know it is absurd' to count on Democrats supporting the pursuit of fiscal 2026 funding bills if the GOP votes along party lines to delete existing funding or pile on more cash. That's what Republicans did in boosting military and border security budgets through their tax and spending megabill Trump signed on July 4.
But Schumer also stopped short of delivering a clear threat ahead of the September shutdown deadline. And Democrats aren't yet willing to give up on funding negotiations with their GOP colleagues, even after Republicans ignored their warnings about eroding trust in bipartisan talks by backing the clawbacks package last week.
In fact, Democratic appropriators are largely leaning in, especially in the Senate, where GOP leaders plan to bring bipartisan funding measures to the floor as soon as this week.
'I think the most important thing for us to do is to continue to move the appropriations process as expeditiously as we can, to try and find bipartisan agreement,' Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), a top appropriator, said in an interview, 'because it's in everybody's interest to do this and to move forward.'
Cassandra Dumay and Calen Razor contributed to this report.
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