
Trump tells Schumer to ‘GO TO HELL' over Senate nominee deal after negotiations blow up
Senate Republicans and Democrats were quick to point the finger at one another for the deal's demise, but it was ultimately Trump who nuked the talks.
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In a lengthy post on his social media platform Truth Social, Trump accused Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., of 'demanding over One Billion Dollars in order to approve a small number of our highly qualified nominees.'
'This demand is egregious and unprecedented, and would be embarrassing to the Republican Party if it were accepted. It is political extortion, by any other name,' Trump said.
'Tell Schumer, who is under tremendous political pressure from within his own party, the Radical Left Lunatics, to GO TO HELL!'
'Do not accept the offer,' he continued.
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'Go home and explain to your constituents what bad people the Democrats are, and what a great job the Republicans are doing, and have done, for our Country. Have a great RECESS and, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!!!'
Instead of finding a pathway to vote on as many as 60 of the president's nominees, all of which moved through committee with bipartisan support, lawmakers rapid-fire voted on seven before leaving Washington until September.
But prior to the president's edict, both sides of the aisle believed they were on the verge of a breakthrough to both meet Trump's desire to see his nominees confirmed and leave Washington.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said that there were 'lots of offers' made between him and Schumer over the course of negotiations.
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3 President Trump called out Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer on Truth Social, accusing him of 'demanding over One Billion Dollars in order to approve a small number of our highly qualified nominees.'
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'There were several different times where I think either or both sides maybe thought there was a deal in the end,' he said.
Senate Democrats wanted the White House to unfreeze billions in National Institute of Health and foreign aid funding, in addition to a future agreement that no more clawback packages would come from the White House.
In exchange, they would greenlight several of Trump's non-controversial nominees.
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Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., accused Schumer of going 'too far' by upping the price tag on his demands.
3 Trump also said in his post, 'Go home and explain to your constituents what bad people the Democrats are, and what a great job the Republicans are doing, and have done, for our Country.'
ZUMAPRESS.com
'We've had three different deals since last night,' he said.
'And every time it's been, every time it's 'I want more,'' Mullin said of Schumer's demands.
He said that Republicans weren't caught off guard by Trump's call to halt talks, and noted that the White House had been heavily involved in negotiations.
'You get to a realization that there was, it was never about making a deal,' he continued.
3 Lawmakers decided to only vote on 7 of Trump's 60 nominees for positions in his administration.
AP
'They want to go out and say the President's being unrealistic, and because he can't answer to his base to make a deal like we have in every other president in history.'
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Now, Republicans won't pursue recess appointments, but Mullin noted that moving ahead with a rule changes to the confirmation process when lawmakers return in September was going to happen in response.
Senate Democrats, on the other hand, countered that their offer never changed, and that Republicans kept increasing the number of nominees they wanted across the line, and attempted to include in more controversial, partisan picks.
'The ask evolved on both sides quite a bit over time,' Thune said.
'But in the end, we never got to a place where we had both sides agree to lock it in.'

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