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US Senate advances plan to avert government shutdown, in vote that exposes Democratic rifts

A man wearing a navy suit and pink floral ties wears glasses on the tip of his nose as he walks through a crowd of people holding their phones.
A six-month spending bill advanced in the Senate after Democrats split on the bill. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Shumer, D-NY, announced Thursday that he would back the bill, creating an opportunity for others to follow.
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Kayla Bartkowski
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Senate advances plan to avert shutdown, in vote that exposes Democratic rifts
President Trump's signature came after the Senate voted 54 to 46 to approve a spending bill to fund the government through the end of September.

The Senate voted to advance a Republican-backed bill to fund the government, setting the measure on a glide-path to final passage ahead of a midnight funding deadline.

While Republicans control the Senate, they do not hold the 60 seats necessary to break a filibuster. The final vote was 62-38, as 10 Democrats joined Republicans in supporting the measure. Kentucky Republican Sen. Rand Paul and all other Democrats opposed.

The vote highlights deep divisions within the Democratic party over how to respond to President Donald Trump in his second term. The decision by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., to support the funding bill sparked an intense backlash from House Democrats , who almost unanimously opposed it.

"I think there is a deep sense of outrage and betrayal, and this is not just progressive Democrats — this is across the board, the entire party," New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez told reporters Thursday night at a party retreat in Leesburg, Va.

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"I think it is a huge slap in the face," she said.

The Senate Democrats who opposed the bill — a stopgap measure known as a continuing resolution, or CR — argued that helping to pass it would give Trump and his advisor Elon Musk the leeway to continue slashing the federal government without oversight. But they also acknowledged that a shutdown would bring pain and disruption. New Mexico Sen. Martin Heinrich said Thursday that Democrats were wrestling with what the "least worst outcome" would be.

"This president has put us in a position where, in either direction lots of people's constituents are gonna get hurt, and hurt badly," said Heinrich, who voted against advancing the bill. "I think when you confront a bully, you have to confront a bully. And I'm not gonna vote for this CR. But I fully respect people who've come to a different conclusion because in either pathway — this is a president who is very comfortable with the pain that either direction will create."

Schumer also said that Democrats were given a choice between two bad options, but he determined that keeping the government open would "minimize the harms to the American people."

"As bad as passing the CR is, allowing Donald Trump to take even more power via a government shutdown is a far worse option," Schumer said on the Senate floor Thursday.

Shutdown averted, but Democrats walk away

The backlash to Schumer's decision has turned to rumblings of frustration about his future.

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House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., was asked directly about whether Democrats need a new leader in the Senate. He evaded.

"Next question," he said, moving on.

Multiple Democratic senators refused to answer whether they had confidence in Schumer as leader of the party.

When asked by reporters, freshman Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., remained silent. He later told NPR that while the party was united, "it would help us unify more if we had a [postmortem.]"

Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., told reporters that there was a "clear division in strategy" between Jeffries and Schumer.

"I think leader Jeffries does reflect some of the concerns I'm hearing from colleagues, from the House who have also reached out to me," he said.

Coons told reporters he believes House and Senate Democrats can band together in opposition to Trump's agenda moving forward, especially as the GOP works to pass their reconciliation bill.

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"There's plenty to unite us on the other side of today's vote," he added.

New Mexico Democratic Rep. Teresa Leger Fernandez told NPR Friday that Schumer was thinking "short-term."

"What Democrats in the House took very seriously was that this wasn't about a government shutdown. This was about giving Musk and Trump the ability to shut down the programs they didn't like," she said. "A shutdown is temporary. It forces them back to the table."

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