
The government shutdown is poised to become the longest ever this week as the impasse between Democrats and Republicans has dragged into a new month.
Millions of people could lose food aid benefits, health care subsidies are set to expire and there are few real talks between the parties over how to end it.
President Donald Trump said in an interview aired on Sunday that he âwon’t be extortedâ by Democrats who are demanding negotiations to extend the Affordable Care Act subsidies that expire at the end of the year for millions of Americans.
Echoing congressional Republicans, the president said on CBS’s 60 Minutes that he will only negotiate when the government is reopened.
Trumpâs comments signal that the shutdown could continue to drag on for some time as federal workers, including air traffic controllers, are set to miss additional paychecks and there is uncertainty over whether 42 million Americans who receive federal food aid will be able to access the assistance.
Senate Democrats have now voted 13 times against reopening the government, insisting that they need Trump and Republicans to negotiate with them first.
The president said that Democrats âhave lost their way” and predicted that they will eventually capitulate to Republicans.
âI think they have to,â Trump said. âAnd if they don’t vote, it’s their problem.â
He also reiterated his pleas to Republican leaders to change Senate rules and scrap the filibuster.
Senate Republicans have repeatedly rejected that idea since Trump’s first term, arguing that the rule requiring 60 votes to overcome any objections in the Senate is vital to the institution and has allowed them to stop Democratic policies when they are in the minority.
âRepublicans have to get tougher,â Trump said in the CBS interview. âIf we end the filibuster, we can do exactly what we want.â
With the two parties at a standstill, the shutdown, now in its 33rd day and approaching its sixth week, appears likely to become the longest in history. The previous record was set in 2019, when Trump demanded that Congress give him money for a U.S.-Mexico border wall.
A potentially decisive week
Trumpâs push on the filibuster could prove a distraction for Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., and Republican senators who have opted instead to stay the course as the consequences of the shutdown have become more acute.
Republicans are hoping that at least some Democrats will eventually give them the votes they need as moderates have been in weekslong talks with rank-and-file Republicans about potential compromises that could guarantee votes on health care in exchange for reopening the government. Republicans need five additional Democrats to pass their bill.
âWe need five with a backbone to say we care more about the lives of the American people than about gaining some political leverage,â Thune said on the Senate floor as the Senate left Washington for the weekend on Thursday.
Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine, a Democrat, said on ABCâs âThis Weekâ on Sunday that there is a group of people talking about âa path to fix the health care debacleâ and a commitment from Republicans not to fire more federal workers. But itâs still unclear if those talks could produce a meaningful compromise.
Far apart on Obamacare subsidies
Trump said in the 60 Minutes interview that the Affordable Care Act â often known as Obamacare because it was signed and championed by former President Barack Obama â is “terrible” and that if the Democrats vote to reopen the government, âwe will work on fixing the bad health care that we have right now.â
Democrats feel differently, arguing that the marketplaces set up by the ACA are working as record numbers of Americans have signed up for the coverage. But they want to extend subsidies first enacted during the COVID-19 pandemic so that premiums won’t go up for millions of people on Jan. 1.
âWe want to sit down with Thune, with (House Speaker Mike) Johnson, with Trump, and negotiate a way to address this horrible health care crisis,â Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said last week.
No appetite for bipartisanship
As Democrats have pushed Trump and Republicans to negotiate, Trump has showed little interest in doing so. He immediately called for an end to the Senate filibuster after a trip to Asia while the government was shut down.
White House Spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said on Sunday Morning Futures on Fox News that the president has spoken directly to both Thune and Johnson about the filibuster. But a spokesman for Thune said Friday that his position hasnât changed, and Johnson said on Sunday that Republicans traditionally have resisted calling for an end to the filibuster because it protects them from âthe worst impulses of the far-left Democrat Party.â
Trump said on 60 Minutes that âI like John Thune, I think he’s terrific. But I disagree with him on this point.â
The president has spent much of the shutdown mocking Democrats, posting videos of House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries in a Mexican sombrero. The White House website has a satirical âMy Spaceâ page for Democrats, a parody based on the social media site that was popular in the early 2000s. âWe just love playing politics with peopleâs livelihoods,â the page reads.
Democrats have repeatedly said that they need Trump to get serious and weigh in. Virginia Sen. Mark Warner said that he hopes the shutdown could end âthis weekâ because Trump is back in Washington.
Republicans âcanât move on anything without a Trump sign off,â Warner said on âFace the Nationâ on CBS.
Record-breaking shutdown
The 35-day shutdown that lasted from December 2018 to January 2019 ended when Trump retreated from his demands over a border wall. That came amid intensifying delays at the nationâs airports and multiple missed paydays for hundreds of thousands of federal workers.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said on ABC’s This Week that there have already been delays at several airports âand itâs only going to get worse.â
Many of the workers are âconfronted with a decision,â he said. âDo I put food on my kidsâ table, do I put gas in the car, do I pay my rent or do I go to work and not get paid?”
As flight delays around the country increased, New York City’s emergency management department posted on Sunday that Newark Airport was under a ground delay because of âstaffing shortages in the control tower” and that they were limiting arrivals to the airport.
âThe average delay is about 2 hours, and some flights are more than 3 hours late,â the account posted. âFAA planning notes show a possibility of a full ground stop later if staffing shortages or demand increases.â
Also in the crossfire are the 42 million Americans who receive SNAP benefits. The Department of Agriculture planned to withhold $8 billion needed for payments to the food program starting on Saturday until two federal judges ordered the administration to fund it.
House Democratic leader Jeffries, D-N.Y., accused Trump and Republicans of attempting to âweaponize hunger.â He said that the administration has managed to find ways for funding other priorities during the shutdown, but is slow-walking pushing out SNAP benefits despite the court orders.
âBut somehow they canât find money to make sure that Americans donât go hungry,â Jeffries said in an appearance on CNN’s âState of the Union.â
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, in his own CNN appearance Sunday, said the administration continues to await direction from the courts.
âThe best way for SNAP benefits to get paid is for Democrats â for five Democrats to cross the aisle and reopen the government,â Bessent said
