The Democrats' shutdown is terrible politics (for them)
Los Angeles Times
|October 19, 2025
It fits with the rest of the party's unpopular platform, defying the American people's wishes on easy issues
HOUSE MINORITY LEADER Hakeem Jeffries and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.
ON THURSDAY, Senate Democrats voted for the 10th time to prolong the federal government shutdown. They also voted against funding the military, thereby necessitating that the Pentagon initiate some innovative accounting in order to ensure service members are paid on time.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) defended his caucus’s latest vote, opining, “It’s always been unacceptable to Democrats to do the defense bill without other bills that have so many things that are important to the American people in terms of healthcare, in terms of housing, in terms of safety.” But to most Americans, such tendentious bloviating falls on deaf ears. Most commonsense Americans understand that there is no reason paying America’s warriors should be held hostage to arcane debates over housing policy.
As Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.), one of three Senate Democrats who joined Republicans on Thursday in support of the defense appropriations bill, put it earlier this week: “You know, if you're thinking about winning the election, now, that’s all going to come down to seven or eight states.... And a lot of the things, the extremism that people turned their back on in ‘24, and that’s how we kind of came up short.”
It’s wise advice. But Fetterman is likely to pay for being such a rare voice of (relative) reason within the party with an impending bruising Senate primary contest.
This story is from the October 19, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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