The Senate puts forward the first bills of spending despite the issues of democratic confidence

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The Senate Republicans and Democrats have advanced the first set of bills of expenditure in the upper House, despite the signals of the Democrats that they can block the government’s financing process.
In the days and weeks preceding the vote, the Democrats of the Senate warned that the adoption by the Republicans of very partisan bills, such as the Griffon package of $ 9 billion by President Donald Trump, had re -tired that the beams of the credits process.
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The head of the majority of the Senate, John Thune, Rs.d., went to the Senate Chamber to vote on a bill on January 22, 2025 in Washington. (Kayla Bartkowski / Getty Images)
However, after meeting in camera on Tuesday afternoon, the Democrats finally provided enough votes to advance the bill, which would finance military construction and the VA. Voting allows legislators to make changes and debate the bill.
The head of the Senate minority, Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., said after the meeting that the Democrats were still aiming for a Bipartisan spending agreement, actually opening the door to his conference to support the package of expenditure invoices for the moment.
“We are working together to get one,” said Schumer. “But the main thing is that the Republicans make things much more difficult. Attachments, retained, pocket ruptures cancel this directly.”
The bill advanced on a vote of 90 to 8, with Schumer and the majority of the Democrats of the Senate joining each Republican to open a debate on the bill.
The Democrats were largely frustrated by the adoption of Trump’s breakdown package last week, which reduced funding for foreign aid and public broadcasting, arguing that this dissolved confidence between the parties when it comes to creating bills of expenditure.
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Leader of the Minority of the Senate Chuck Schumer (Reuters)
They argued that reaching an agreement on a financing bill, only to see their priorities which were then eliminated by cancellations, broke confidence in their republican colleagues to stick to their words.
“There is no doubt,” Fox News Digital told Fox News. “I mean, someone does one thing one day and defeats it the next day, which obviously creates problems of trust.”
Head of the majority of the Senate John ThuneRs.d., chose to call the bluff of his counterparts and put the bill on the floor. The fact of not advancing the legislation could have pointed out a rocky route to come to finance the government and have beaten the deadline of September 30 to avoid a partial closure of the government.
“The Democrats indicated that they are so upset by a bill on cancellations last week, which, by the way, reduced a tenth of 1% of all federal spending, that they could somehow use it to close the credits process and therefore close the government,” said Thune.
“We think it would be a big mistake, and I hope they will think about it better and work with us, and we try to give them what they have asked, (which) is a process of bipartisan credits,” he continued.
Before the vote, the president of the Senate credits, Susan Collins, R-Maine, urged the adoption of the bill by the procedural obstacle, and noted that when she and the senator Patty Murray, D-Wash., The best democrat in the panel, ended the committee, they “were” committed to working together “to spend invoices.
She noted that when the Democrats controlled the House, legislators did not have the same opportunity to consider spending bills, but recognized that it was always a “difficult legislative environment”.
“This is a fundamental responsibility for the congress, and I want to express my gratitude to the leader of the majority of the Senate, Senator Thune, for giving us the opportunity to bring the first of the bill for the law for the 2026 in the Senate,” she said.
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Senator John Fetterman during the sixth episode of the Senate project moderated by the presenter of Fox News Shannon Bream at the Edward Institute M. Kennedy for the American Senate on June 2, 2025, in Boston. (Scott Eisen / Getty Images)
However, the adoption of the first bill, and the amendment process that followed to a final vote, does not guarantee that the credits process will take place well before the deadline in the coming months.
The Congress has not adopted expenditure invoices thanks to a process called regular order since the late 1990s and is generally based on short government financing extensions, called continuous resolutions, and at the end of the year, colossal spending packages, called Omnibus, to keep the lights in Washington.
Disagreements on financing levels between the Senate and the Chamber, associated with persistent questions on the question of whether Schumer will continue to play ball with the Republicans, could create another force test on the deadline of September.
Schumer said that he would have a confab with the minority head of the Hakeem Jeffries room, Dn.y., and the best Democrats in the Credit Committees in the Chamber and the Senate, representative Rosa Delauro, D-Conn., And Murray, “to discuss the credit process both in the Chamber and the Senate in the coming weeks”.
“With so much hard work in advance, the government’s financing deadline for less than 25 legislative days, the Republicans should focus on work with us to deliver American families,” he said.
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Senator John FettermanWhich earlier this year voted with the Republicans and a handful of her democratic colleagues to thwart a partial closure of the government, had a severe message for the Senate Democrats who may want to hinder the government’s financing process.
“I will never vote, never to close our government,” Pennsylvania Democrat at Fox News Digital told Pennsylvania. “It is a central responsibility. And now we may not like a lot of these changes in things, and I don’t do it, but I say that it is that democracy works.”
“And now closing the government, how could you do this and dive our country into chaos,” he continued.