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Senate Dems Cave, Help GOP Advance Bill to Fund Government, Avoid Shutdown 


By: George Caldwell | March 14, 2025

Read more at https://www.dailysignal.com/2025/03/14/senate-dems-cave-help-gop-advance-bill-to-fund-government-avoid-shutdown/

A scowling Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. (Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images)

The Senate on Friday voted 62-38 to end debate on a continuing resolution to fund the government through September, all but guaranteeing final passage of a GOP-crafted bill that would avoid a partial federal shutdown. 9 Democrats and one independent who caucuses with them helped push the Republican-backed bill over the finish line.

The continuing resolution bill arose out of political necessity after Congress was unable to pass individual spending bills for the current year.

“The budget from last YEAR is still not done. We are working very hard with the House and Senate to pass a clean, temporary government funding Bill (‘CR’) to the end of September. Let’s get it done!” he wrote on Truth Social on Feb. 27.

Trump’s call for a stopgap measure to provide funding to the government came as the narrow Republican majorities in Congress faced the difficult task of agreeing on a budget resolution. The effort to pass a CR through Sept. 30, the end of fiscal 2025, was complicated by Democrat demands that Republicans promise Trump would cease his cost-cutting actions.

Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., the ranking member on the Senate Appropriations Committee, said that she and her fellow Democrats would support the CR if guarantees were provided that Trump would not impound funding and would back off of Elon Musk’s anti-bureaucracy efforts.

Ultimately, the bill passed in the House along mostly partisan lines, with only one Democrat, Rep. Jared Golden, D-Maine, voting for it.

From the outset, the situation in the Senate appeared to be much the same. Sen. John Hickenlooper, D-Colo., who was once thought to be open to the CR, took to X and said he wouldn’t vote for it because of Trump’s frontal attack on the bureaucracy.

“This bill would wipe out congressional oversight, letting Trump cut and redirect funding however he wants,” said Hickenlooper.

But some Democrats, facing the harsh reality of the fact that their opposition could trigger a government shutdown, decided to support the CR. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., who had previously said he would urge his members to vote against it, said in a speech Thursday that he would not block the CR.

“While the CR bill is very bad, the potential for a shutdown has consequences for America that are much, much worse,” said Schumer.

Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., asked shortly before the cloture vote why Schumer backed down, said, “It would be to commit suicide” if the Democrats triggered a shutdown. Sen. John Fetterman, D-Penn., went a step further than Schumer, deciding to support the bill to avoid a shutdown, writing on X, “I disagree with many points in the CR, but I will never vote to shut our government down.”

Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., told The Daily Signal shortly before the cloture vote that she was confident Democrats would moderate their opposition to Trump in the future.

“I actually have great optimism the Democrats will get their land legs back under them. They always have. Right at the moment, they’re flailing a bit. But that won’t last,” said Lummis.

“They’ll pull it together, and they’ll either find ways to work with Republicans to get some of their policy priorities included, and if they don’t, this flailing with opposition instead of legislating will hurt them in the 2026 election cycle.

House passes Article V rule change


Posted by on January 09, 2015

URL of the Original Posting Site: http://www.conventionofstates.com/house_passes_article_v_rule_change

Rep. Steve Stivers’ (R-OH) amendment to the House Rules passed by a vote on the House Floor this week, according to a press release published by Rep. Stivers’ office. The rule will provide a system with which to track, count, and organize Article V applications to Congress.

“I am pleased my colleagues supported my addition to the House Rules this week,” Stivers said. “I believe a Balanced Budget Amendment is the only way to stop out-of-control government spending.  I hope the passage of this rule will put us one step closer to fiscal responsibility and the inclusion of the BBA in the United States Constitution.”

Rep. Stivers’ press release went on to explain the rule in detail:

“Specifically, the rule creates a process for the intake of the petitions through the Chairman of the Judiciary Committee and gives the Clerk’s Office the responsibility of making the petitions electronically available and organized by the subject, state of origin and year of receipt. This will allow Congress, as well as the American people, to better track the progress of specific Article V efforts.  Prior to Stivers’ rule update, no formal process for cataloging the petitions existed.”

Rep. Stivers’ rule change is an invaluable asset in the Article V process. Where before there was confusion and uncertainty regarding how many applications had been submitted on what topic, now there will be a clear catalog of that information.

We applaud Rep. Stivers’ effort to smooth the road to a Convention of States, and we hope his amendment to the House Rules will bring this country one step closer to the change we so desperately need.

By WhatDidYouSay.org

By WhatDidYouSay.org

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