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Majority Leader Schumer Floor Remarks On The Need To Avoid A Harmful And Unnecessary Government Shutdown And The Radical Project 2025 Agenda

Washington, D.C. – Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) today spoke on the Senate floor to urge his Republican colleagues in the House to stop wasting time on a CR proposal intended to lay the groundwork for dangerous Project 2025 proposals and to instead work with Democrats on a bipartisan package to avoid a harmful and unnecessary government shutdown. Below are Senator Schumer’s remarks, which can also be viewed here:

Our House Republican colleagues are struggling with a bad case of Groundhog Day.

The government faces a critical funding deadline in a few weeks. If that deadline isn’t met, the government will shut down. Only bipartisanship will help us meet that deadline.

But instead of pursuing bipartisanship, Speaker Johnson is yet again – yet again – wasting time caving to the hard-right, despite his razor thin majority. Hasn’t he learned? This is what got the Republicans in trouble the last few times: that we had to fund the government, and they appeal to the right wing and their sort of strict, narrow, partisan ideology that they think they can force everybody – even dissident Republicans, let alone Democrats and the President – to go along with them.

But, of course, it doesn’t happen. And then we come to a bipartisan agreement. Oh yes, it is certainly Groundhog day once again, as the Republicans repeat the same mistake they've made over and over again. And that is the House Republicans, led unfortunately by Speaker Johnson.

As I've said, we’ve seen this play out time and time again. Is it any surprise that the Speaker’s purely partisan CR seems to be running into trouble?

The answer is very simple: the House should stop wasting time on a CR proposal that cannot become law. The House should stop wasting its time gathering together among themselves, not even all of them, putting together a bill without consulting Leader Jeffries, myself, or the president. But that's what they do. And it doesn't work. It just doesn't work.

Instead, Republicans should work with Democrats on a bipartisan package, one that has input from both sides, one that avoids harmful cuts, one that is free of poison pills. We're ready to sit down and work them immediately.

Now, to be fair, the Speaker’s proposal was not entirely bad news. I was heartened to see that Speaker Johnson’s proposal held on to the bipartisan topline spending agreement that I reached with the Speaker earlier this year. It is a good sign that Speaker Johnson seems to accept reality that any CR we produce in the coming weeks will have to include that funding level.

But sadly, the good news ends there, because on the whole the House Republican CR is an unserious and uncooked product.

It’s not serious for Republicans to say they want to kick the can down the road for six months on funding the government. Funding the government is the most basic responsibility we have in Congress, so to say “lets hold off for half a year” should be a non-starter.

It’s also not serious for Republicans to release a proposal that endangers troop readiness, risks troop pay, hamstrings our efforts to outcompete the Chinese government. You cannot run an army on a six month CR. You cannot put everything on hold for six months, have defense contracts put on ice for six months, and allow for Russia and the Chinese government to gain on us. It’s that simple. And the head of the Joint Chiefs sent a letter that said just that.

It’s not serious for Republicans to say they want to pass a CR that fails to properly extend E-verify, H-2B visas, and other border security programs that stop drugs like fentanyl. They talk a lot about the border, but the fundamental ways we toughen up enforcement on the border and interior of the country with E-verify, they ignore. It shows how political this document is.

It is particularly egregious that the Speaker’s own proposal disbands a critical law enforcement effort to stop drug smuggling, drug cartels, money laundering.

But the parade of horrible keeps going, just doesn’t end there.

It’s not serious for Republicans to say they want to pass a CR that forgets to fund critical health programs. Under the Republican proposal, telehealth would be harmed. We know how important telehealth is, particularly for rural Americans. It's made health care much better, cheaper, and more effective in rural areas. But they don't fund it. Wait for six months to tell someone in a rural area, who needs medical help? People with diabetes would struggle to get aid they need. And Community Health Centers – often the only resource for millions of working-class Americans to get their health care if they don't have insurance but fall above the Medicare or the Medicaid lines – would be endangered.

And if all that weren’t enough, Republicans have no plan for extending Farm Bill funding.

One of the consequences of failing to pass the farm bill is going over the so-called “dairy cliff,” which is what happens when the Dairy Margin Coverage Program dries up.

For this to happen, it would decimate farmers across the country, and I know in my own state farmers have told me some of them would go out of business if we went over that dairy cliff. Monthly payments that help farmers cover the gap between the price of milk and feed would halt. It would not only affect our farmers, it would affect our consumers. The costs of milk, needed for our babies and healthy kids, all of us – I like milk, I look forward to drinking it a lot – could potentially double if we went over that dairy cliff. It would create seismic disruptions in our supply chains and cause market panic.

So, these are just some of the terrible consequences of proceeding with Speaker Johnson’s six month unserious CR proposal. It is little surprise that the White House has already issued a veto threat.

Now as far as their timeline, let’s be very clear about what Republicans are trying to do with this six month CR. They’re trying to lay the groundwork for Project 2025 in hopes they get a favorable result in the election. That is why the right wing is pushing this. It's not just, you know, they don't like government funding. They have this horrible document, Project 2025, which would turn America inside out. I believe it would create huge economic, social, and all kinds of problems, problems of protecting freedom. But that's what they want to do. That's their goal. Why Speaker Johnson goes along with it is beyond me.

By trying to set up a funding fight in March, right wing Republicans hope for the chance to hold government funding hostage in exchange for some of the nastiest, most harmful policies that Donald Trump promises in Project 2025.

Let there be no mistake: Project 2025 is the Trump Agenda. Some of his top advisers helped put it together. Some of the lead people on this are talked about for high-up positions in a Trump Administration, should, God forbid, it occur. Over 140 people who have worked in the Trump Administration contributed to it.

To call the ideas in Trump’s Project 2025 radical would be an understatement.

Project 2025 would pave the way for the hard-right’s national abortion ban by restricting access to FDA-approved medication.

Project 2025 would abolish the Department of Education, decimate our public education system by wiping out school meal programs. Hungry kids? Want to send kids to school with an empty belly? They can't learn. Oh, we have to spend a little to provide a nutritious breakfast, which incidentally helps our farmers? Isn’t that horrible, says the right wing. They’d rather their billionaires – who help fund all of this stuff – pay even less money to the government. It would defund public schools, they’d end student loan forgiveness. All the young people who have the burden of student loans on their back, you, I, others, are trying to reduce or eliminate that burden. Forget it, if this right wing budget goes into effect.

Project 2025 would make health care less affordable for tens of millions of Americans, it would rip away benefits from our veterans, it would attack small farmers and small businesses, and so much more. The list goes on and on and on, unfortunately.

These ideas aren’t theoretical, oh no. They’re not abstract ideas up in the clouds. They are real proposals that the hard-right intends to push if they come into power.

They are so narrow and focused on their own agenda. As I said, in large part over the years, funded by billionaires, greedy. Not all wealthy people are greedy. Many of them understand their obligation to help the country that's been so good to them. But they're a narrow group, very greedy. They don't want to pay any taxes, some of them. Let's have a national sales tax, some of them say, which would create huge inflation on the average middle class. They don't have to pay income tax? Lord help us.

And Republicans right now are hoping that a funding fight early next year would turn into a hostage negotiation between keeping the government open and passing Project 2025’s terrible policies.

But let me assure the American people, we Democrats aren’t fooled. Let me assure our mainstream Republicans, who quietly grit their teeth when they hear about this, that the American people are not fooled. A surprisingly large number of American people have already heard of Project 2025 and don't like it. The more people learn about Project 2025, the more they realize how devastating it is and how horrible it would be for our economy, how disastrous it would be for public safety, and how catastrophic it would be for our country.

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