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Senate Democrats eye plan that would allow vote on GOP funding bill and avoid shutdown

Last updated: March 13, 2025 11:49 am
Oliver James
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6 Min Read
Senate Democrats eye plan that would allow vote on GOP funding bill and avoid shutdown
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Washington — Senate Democrats are considering a plan that would pave the way for a GOP bill to keep the government funded for six months in exchange for a doomed-to-fail vote on their own 30-day alternative, facing an uncomfortable choice between allowing the Republican measure to pass or letting the government shut down.

The Senate plans to take up the House-passed bill to fund the government through September beginning on Friday, and Republicans need 60 votes to invoke cloture and advance the measure, meaning it will need the support of Democrats to get to a vote on final passage.

With government funding set to expire on Friday night, Democrats find themselves in the position of being able to block the GOP bill, but also wary of the government shutdown that would ensue if they do so. Democratic leaders are instead pushing for a 30-day funding extension that would allow more time for negotiations on new spending bills — a nonstarter, given Republican control of the House and Senate.

A possible solution began to emerge after Senate Democrats met on Capitol Hill on Wednesday. The plan would call for Democrats to provide the votes needed to advance the GOP bill in exchange for a vote on an amendment with their own one-month stopgap measure, which would almost certainly fail. Democrats who oppose the GOP version could then vote against its final passage. Some members see it as a way to save face while also avoiding a shutdown.

“I think we’re going to all be ‘no’ on cloture unless we get an agreement to propose at least this 30-day clean [continuing resolution] amendment and maybe a couple of others,” Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia told reporters Thursday morning. “So we’ll be ‘no’ on cloture unless we get an agreement to do that. I’m not aware of whether the Republicans have agreed to that yet, but we’ll be ‘no’ on cloture if we don’t get it, and I think that’s a unified position.”

The House approved the six-month funding measure on Tuesday largely along party lines, sending the funding fight to the Senate. 

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer speaks during a news conference following the weekly Senate Democrat policy luncheon at the Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, March 11, 2025.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer speaks during a news conference following the weekly Senate Democrat policy luncheon at the Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, March 11, 2025.

Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images


Senate Majority Leader John Thune told reporters Thursday morning that his and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s offices have been in touch, but Democrats haven’t made a formal offer. Thune noted that if Democrats want a vote on the 30-day continuing resolution in exchange for helping Republicans reach the 60-vote threshold on the House-passed bill, Republicans are “open to that.”

“We’re waiting for them to decide what they want to do,” he said. Thune filed cloture on the House-passed measure Thursday night, setting up a Friday vote.

Democrats emerged from Wednesday’s meeting touting their alternate plan that would fund the government until April 11. Schumer warned Republicans that they do not have the votes to approve the House-passed stopgap measure, which increases defense spending and funding for veterans’ health care, while decreasing non-defense spending below 2024 levels. 

“Funding the government should be a bipartisan effort. But Republicans chose a partisan path, drafting their continuing resolution without any input, any input, from congressional Democrats,” Schumer said.

Although efforts to fund the government usually find bipartisan support, Democrats widely oppose the measure and have expressed frustration with the spending reductions, while warning that it would give the Trump administration and Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency even more latitude to carry out cost-slashing efforts. The possibility of forcing a shutdown is one of the few points of leverage Democrats have as the minority in both chambers.

But Democrats also fear the fallout of a shutdown, which could serve as the pretext for the Trump administration to make even deeper cuts across the federal workforce. Some Senate Democrats see the plan to vote for cloture but against final passage as a way to thread the needle, but outspoken progressives have denounced the plan, saying the party is capitulating to the president and Republicans while getting nothing substantive in return.

“I hope Senate Democrats understand there is nothing clever about setting up a fake failed 30 day CR first to turn around & vote for cloture on the GOP spending bill,” New York Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez posted on X on Thursday. “Those games won’t fool anyone. It won’t trick voters, it won’t trick House members. People will not forget it.”

Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania, the sole Democrat who publicly said he would back the House-passed measure, likewise criticized the idea of exchanging support for cloture for a vote on the short-term continuing resolution.

“The House GOP CR will then pass the Senate because it only needs 51 votes,” Fetterman said in a post on X. “Total theater is neither honest with constituents nor a winning argument.”

Alan He

contributed to this report.

Kaia Hubbard

Kaia Hubbard is a politics reporter for CBS News Digital, based in Washington, D.C.

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