Senate Dems risk shutdown by rejecting GOP funding bill

A bird flies near the U.S. Capitol building in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 25, 2025.
REUTERS/Nathan Howard

Well, the old game of chicken over funding the US federal government is back on, as Senate Democrats said Wednesday they would NOT vote for the six-month stopgap funding bill passed by the GOP in the House on Tuesday night.

Given the procedural details of this kind of funding bill, which requires 60 votes, the Dems can kill the bill despite holding just 45 seats.

Why’d the Dems do this? They say the six-month bill, which would keep current overall spending levels in place without earmarking specific outlays, would give the Trump administration, and quasi-official DOGE Czar Elon Musk, too much leeway to radically reshape the federal government.

Instead, the Dems prefer a 30-day stopgap, during which time they want to negotiate more specific tax and spend details with the GOP. Getting a new bill will be tough, as the House has already broken for a weeklong St Patrick’s Day recess.

The clock is ticking: Current funding for the Federal government expires just past midnight on Friday.

The political calculation: Dems are so far betting they’d face less blowback for a shutdown than they would for the perception that they failed to stop Donald Trump’s cost-cutting agenda, which could target key entitlements like Medicaid.

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