House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (DN.Y.) said Democrats will actually bring their colleagues home on Monday’s Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and take their colleagues home after the government shuts down.
“People will die,” Jeffries wrote in a letter “Dear Colleague” uploaded to his website on Saturday.
He added: “We are winning this fight for the American people. To this end, the House Democratic Caucus will meet at 6 p.m. ET on Monday, Oct. 6 at 6 p.m. ET. Republicans announced that they will send 48-hour notice to members before any votes that need to return to Washington.”
Johnson cancels scheduled ballots for next week amid federal closure and sends lawmakers to their area As The stalemate between Democrats and Republicans remains.
“The House will return to the meeting and work immediately after Chuck Schumer allows us to reopen the government,” Johnson said in a press conference on Friday.
President Trump, Senate Majority Leader John Dunn (DD
However, Thune shows that future discussions on Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies may occur once settlement funds fail.
“We can’t make a commitment or commitment to COVID subsidies because it’s not what we can guarantee to do the ballots to do,” Thune said Friday. “I’m talking about it, I want to have a conversation with our Democratic colleagues about how to solve this problem…but when the government is shut down, that won’t happen.”
While Schumer and Jeffries are unwaveringly determined to their non-noble, Republican senators are working to flip the votes of their Democratic colleagues.
Senator Maggie Hassan (DN.H.) appears to be a relatively open person who can continue to advance parking measures in exchange for guarantees of the ACA subsidy extension.
“We need a bipartisan road to reach a deal that protects people’s health, health care and prevents them from doubled premiums,” she told CNN.
Three members of the Democratic Caucus have shown commitment to advancing the Republican resolution: Senator Catherine Cortez Masto, a member of the Democratic Leadership Team; Senator John Fettman (Pennsylvania); Senator Angus King (Maine), an independent independent independent of the Democratic Party, voted twice for the Republican Continuing Resolution (CR).
But Jeffries and other party members say they won’t believe Republicans’ commitment to protecting healthcare funds and urge Republican lawmakers to consolidate ACA subsidies as soon as possible.
“Why do we believe Republicans have any interest in the Affordable Care Act based on their discourse, and Republicans have been doing everything they can to implement the Affordable Care Act for 15 years?” asked the House Minority Leader.
House Democratic Caucus Chairman Pete Aguilar (California) echoed his concerns.
“We won’t give the promise of little finger like spokesman Johnson attends his meeting,” Aguilar said.
“His words mean little to Democrats at this point after leaving the real bipartisan CR in December.”