Monday, November 10, 2025

Senate Democrats defend breaking ranks to end shutdown as Johnson to finally swear in Arizona’s Adelita Grijalva – US politics live

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‘It’s the opening of an opportunity,’ say Senate Democrats who broke ranks to end government shutdown

The eight Democratic and Independent senators who broke ranks with the party to advance a bill that would end the government shutdown – the longest in US history – have defended their decisions amid furor from their party and base.

“What happened tonight is not the closing of a chapter. It’s the opening of an opportunity. What the chapter does close is the damaging shutdown that is only getting worse, that is only going to impact more and more people,” said Angus King, the Independent lawmaker from Maine who caucuses with Democrats.

Maggie Hassan, the Democratic senator from New Hampshire, who was part of the bipartisan talks to strike a deal with Republicans, addressed the fact that the revised bill forgoes the Obamacare subsidies that Democrats made a central part of their negotiations.

“Congress has one month to engage in serious, bipartisan negotiations to extend the Affordable Care Act’s expiring tax cuts for health insurance,” Hassan wrote in a statement, referring to the vote that GOP lawmakers promised Democrats. “My Democratic colleagues and I have been ready to work on this for months. With the government reopening shortly, Senate Republicans must finally come to the table – or, make no mistake, Americans will remember who stood in the way.”

Meanwhile, senator John Fetterman of Pennsylvania, who was part of the small faction of Democrats in the upper chamber who voted in favor of the original House-passed funding bill on several occasions, said that “it should’ve never come to this,” referring to the ongoing 40-day shutdown. ““I’m sorry to our military, SNAP recipients, gov workers, and Capitol Police who haven’t been paid in weeks,” he added.

An important note. None of the Democratic senators who voted yes on Sunday’s procedural motion are up for re-election in 2026. Two of them, Dick Durbin of Illinois, and Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, are retiring next year, while the earliest that any of the others would face a challenge would be in 2028.

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On the topic of the government inching towards reopening, a White House official told the Guardian that “the action in the Senate is a positive development” and that “we look forward to seeing it progress.”

“President Trump has wanted the government reopened since the first day Democrats shut it down,” the official said.

A reminder that the Senate is trying to fast-track the bill, by getting all 100 lawmakers to get it on the floor for a vote, then they’ll need it to pass the House before it lands on Trump’s desk for a signature.

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