‘Slap in the face’: AOC condemns Schumer over plan to vote for Republican funding bill – as it happened

May Be Interested In:What is a ‘woman’ in law? The Supreme Court ruling


‘Slap in the face’: AOC condemns Schumer over plan to vote yes on Republican funding bill

Several Democratic lawmakers have reacted to Chuck Schumer’s statement that he will vote to advance a partisan Republican bill to avert a government shutdown, which includes cuts to vital programs, by signaling their opposition to the stopgap measure.

“There are members of Congress who have won Trump held districts in some of the most difficult territories in the United States,” Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez told reporters, “who walked the plank and took innumerable risks in order to defend the American people … just to see some Senate Democrats even consider acquiescing to Elon Musk. I think it is a huge slap in the face, and I think that there’s a wide sense of betrayal.”

“This continuing resolution codifies much of this chaos that Elon Musk is wreaking,” Ocasio-Cortez said on CNN. “It sacrifices and completely eliminates congressional authority… to review these impulsive Trump tariffs”, she added, “removes all of the guardrails, all of the accountability measures to ensure that money is being spent in the way that Congress has directed for it to be spent. This turns the federal government into a slush fund for Donald Trump and Elon Musk.”

Senator Tina Smith of Minnesota said she will be voting against the funding bill since “it does not continue the spending and policy law that Congress passed last year. Instead, it would slash support for fetal alcohol syndrome, epilepsy, and Alzheimer’s at the National Institute of Health. It fails to pay for disaster relief or fund hundreds of millions of dollars for important community projects for Minnesota.”

“It would give President Trump vast discretion to allocate funds to reward his political friends and punish those he considers enemies,” she added. “From the beginning, President Trump and the Republicans set this up as an unprecedented power-grab.”

Representative Pramila Jayapal of Washington thanked Smith “for standing up for the American people and refusing to vote for cloture or passage of a horrific Republican spending bill that gives the keys to Musk and Trump to steal from the American people and slash critical programs that people desperately need”.

“Respectfully, Senator Schumer, no,” Representative Bonnie Watson Coleman posted in response to the Democratic minority leader. “This Republican bill is bad for workers, bad for our veterans, bad for our seniors.”

“I’m a hard NO on the Republican spending bill,” Senator Adam Schiff posted. “When a wannabe dictator is trying to seize power, it must not be given to him. Not without a fight.”

Share

Updated at 

Key events

Closing summary

This brings our live coverage of the day in US politics to a close, but we will return on Friday when a vote on a stopgap Republican spending bill in the Senate will determine whether or not the government shuts down. Here are some of the day’s developments:

  • Senator Chuck Schumer, the Democratic minority leader in the Senate, said that he will vote to allow the deeply partisan Republican spending bill become law because a government shutdown would do more harm.

  • Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez told reporters that Senator Chuck Schumer’s statement was “a huge slap in the face, and I think that there’s a wide sense of betrayal.”

  • In a letter sent to the president of Columbia University and the co-chairs of its board of trustees on Thursday, the Trump administration’s antisemitism task force demanded nine specific changes to university policies and structures before negotiations over federal funding would begin.

  • Columbia announced the same day it received the letter that it had complied with item one on the list of demands: expelling and suspending pro-Palestinian student protesters who occupied a campus building last year or took part in a Gaza Solidarity encampment.

  • Representative Raúl Grijalva had died after a long battle with cancer, his office announced on Thursday. His seat will remain vacant until at least September.

  • In 1996 a federal judge found the legal provision now being used to target Mahmoud Khalil unconstitutional. She was Donald Trump’s sister.

  • Corks were not popping on Wall Street on Thursday, as stocks plunged again following Trump’s threat to impose a 200% tariff “on all wines, Champagnes, and alcoholic products” from European Union countries if the trading bloc makes good on its threat to retaliate for steel and aluminum tariffs announced by the US president by adding a 50% tariff on American products, including Kentucky bourbon.

  • The Trump administration has appealed to the supreme court to uphold the president’s executive order curtailing birthright citizenship.

  • The US Postal Service will reduce its staff by 10,000 through early retirements, and has signed an agreement with Elon Musk’s department of government efficiency (Doge) to streamline its operations, postmaster general Louis DeJoy announced.

Share
share Share facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

"Buena Vista Social Club" serenades Broadway
“Buena Vista Social Club” serenades Broadway
Man caught sniffing socks at kids' playground
Man caught sniffing socks at kids’ playground
Putin Overlooks 1 Key Detail As He Claims 'Root Causes' Of Ukraine War Must Be Addressed
Putin Overlooks 1 Key Detail As He Claims ‘Root Causes’ Of Ukraine War Must Be Addressed
How to watch the San Francisco 49ers vs. Green Bay Packers NFL game today: Livestream options, more
How to watch the San Francisco 49ers vs. Green Bay Packers NFL game today: Livestream options, more
A new Microsoft chip could lead to more stable quantum computers
A new Microsoft chip could lead to more stable quantum computers
All-Women Crew Operates Vande Bharat Express on Women’s Day
All-Women Crew Operates Vande Bharat Express on Women’s Day
Frontline Report: Today’s Hard-Hitting Stories | © 2025 | Daily News