WASHINGTON ā Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., indicated Thursday he would vote to advance Republicansā six-month funding bill that passed the House to avert a government shutdown Friday night.
The move represents a major concession from Schumer, yielding to the GOP measure just one day after he vowed that Democrats wouldnāt allow it to pass. It means the bill is likely to find enough votes to clear the 60-vote threshold, and eventually pass with a simple majority, even as a growing number of Senate Democrats came out in opposition to it Thursday.
āThere are no winners in a government shutdown,ā Schumer said in a floor speech. āItās not really a decision, itās a Hobsonās choice: Either proceed with the bill before us or risk Donald Trump throwing America into the chaos of a shutdown.ā
āFor sure, the Republican bill is a terrible option. It is not a clean CR. It is deeply partisan. It doesnāt address far too many of this countryās needs. But I believe allowing Donald Trump to take even much more power via a government shutdown is a far worse option,ā he added. āI will vote to keep the government open and not shut it down.ā
The remarks came after Schumer informed his colleagues in a closed-door meeting that he would vote for the procedural motion to advance the funding bill when it comes to the Senate floor Friday, according to a source familiar with his remarks. Schumerās private comments were first reported by The New York Times.
If the Senate passes passes the bill, it would then go to President Donald Trumpās desk for a signature. A shutdown occurs after 11:59 p.m. ET on Friday if no law is enacted by then.
āWe have a choice between terrible and awful,ā said Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga.
Itās unclear what if anything Schumer received in return for his decision to enable the House bill to pass. Before his comments, Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., hinted at a possible endgame: Democrats get a vote on an amendment to the House bill to turn it into a 30-day stopgap measure, though he wouldnāt commit to dropping a filibuster if Republicans voted down that amendment.
Earlier in the day, a growing number of moderate and swing-state Democrats vowed to oppose the legislation. That included Sen. John Hickenlooper, D-Colo., who called the bill ādangerousā; Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., who said itād āgive unchecked power to Donald Trump and Elon Muskā; Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., who blasted it as āa grab bag of extreme policiesā; Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., who called it āa terrible dealā thatād hurt Virginia.
āOne thing is certain: If we pass this continuing resolution for the next half year, we will own what the president does,ā said Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif. āI am not willing to take ownership of that.ā
From outside the Democratic lunch meeting, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., could be heard yelling about about devastating impacts of a government shutdown, particularly at this juncture.
The senators have faced heavy pressure from House Democratic colleagues and outside liberal advocates outside of the Capitol to hold the line against the six-month bill, which was crafted by Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and the White House.
Yet even as Democrats were rallying against the House GOP bill, they struggled to offer a plausible endgame to avert a shutdown ā or reopen the government if funding lapses after Friday night. They demanded a 30-day stopgap measure to continue funding at status quo levels in order to reach a full funding deal for fiscal year 2025.
That discombobulated approach clashes with the fact that Trump and Johnson have said they donāt want an appropriations deal for a fiscal year that is already half over, as they want to move on to their party-line budget bill to address taxes, immigration and other priorities.
āWeāre trying to convince them. Now, they can be convinced or unconvinced,ā Sen. John Hickenlooper, D-Colo., said about the GOPās rejection of a new appropriations deal.
Democratic senators cited numerous objections to the House bill.
First, they had no input in developing it ā some in the party fear that voting for this would empower Johnson and President Trump to dictate outcomes without negotiating with Democrats to earn their votes.
Second, they object to provisions that would cut non-defense domestic spending by billions of dollars, including a hit to the District of Columbiaās budget, while boosting military spending ā a move they see as sacrificing Democratic priorities for GOP priorities.
Third, they worry that voting for this measure without guardrails on executive power would green-light Trump and billionaire adviser Elon Muskās moves to dismantle parts of the federal government or refuse to spend money directed by Congress.
A new memo Thursday from the Center For American Progress Action Fund, led by longtime Democratic adviser Neera Tanden, called on the party to hold the line against the House Republican bill, making the policy and messaging case for it.
āWhile the consequences of a shutdown are real, Democrats bear no responsibility in fact or in public perception if they continue to support a clean CR or clean 30-day CR. However, supporting the MAGA plan will sap momentum that is building against Republicans,ā said the memo, which was obtained by NBC News from a congressional Democratic source who received it. āLawmakers must focus on connecting the so-called CR to how the Administration and DOGE are actively causing radical harm.ā
Some Democrats believe that voters will blame Republicans in the event of a government shutdown. In a new Quinnipiac national poll, 53% of registered voters said they would blame Trump or Republicans in Congress if the government shuts down; 32% said theyād blame Democrats. Another 15% didnāt know or wouldnāt say.
āJiminy Christmas! Republicans control the House, Senate and White House,ā Sen. Ben Ray LujĆ”n, D-N.M. said.
But Senate Republican leaders say itās time to dispense with the debate over fiscal 2025 funding, and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said Thursday on the floor that the House bill was the only path to preventing a shutdown.
āDemocrats need to decide if theyāre going to support funding legislation that came over from the House, or if theyāre going to shut down the government,ā he said.