Featured News

Just 18 Senate Republicans Voted To Fund The Government And Not Crash The Economy

Last updated on July 18th, 2023 at 02:00 pm

Out of all of the Senate Republicans present for the vote, just 18 of them voted to fund the government and not crash the economy before Christmas.

The bill passed 68-29, and here are the 18 Senate Republicans who voted with Democrats not to destroy the economy before Christmas:

Sen. Roy Blunt (MO)
Sen. John Boozman (AR)
Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (WV)
Sen. Susan Collins (ME)
Sen. John Cornyn (TX)
Sen. Tom Cotton (AR)
Sen. Lindsey Graham (SC)
Sen. Jim Inhofe (OK)
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell
Sen. Jerry Moran (KS)
Sen. Lisa Murkowski (AK)
Sen. Rob Portman (OH)
Sen. Mitt Romney (UH)
Sen. Mike Rounds (SD)
Sen. Richard Shelby (AL)
Sen. John Thune (SD)
Sen. Roger Wicker (MS)
Sen. Todd Young (IN)

The names on the list are a mix of Senate institutionalists, retiring senators, and senators from seats so safe that they can vote for virtually anything, and it would not matter.

There has never been a better time to subscribe to our newsletter. Now, through Christmas Day, all paid subscriptions are 25% off:

However, this vote is why elections have consequences. Mitch McConnell would have never done a year-long government funding deal if he was about to become Majority Leader in a couple of weeks.

If Republicans had flipped the Senate, a continuing resolution would have been passed through the holidays, and Republicans would be demanding that Biden cut programs and lower taxes on the wealthy in exchange for funding the government.

Senate Republicans were eyeing cutting Social Security and Medicare while forcing Biden to make the Trump tax cuts for the wealthy permanent.

When John Fetterman flipped the Senate seat in Pennsylvania, those Republican dreams died.

The Democratic control of the Senate matters. The government funding bill is the perfect example of how eager most Republicans are to crash the economy if they ever get the chance.

 

Follow Me
Jason Easley

Jason is the managing editor. He is also a White House Press Pool and a Congressional correspondent for PoliticusUSA. Jason has a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science. His graduate work focused on public policy, with a specialization in social reform movements. Awards and  Professional Memberships Member of the Society of Professional Journalists and The American Political Science Association

Recent Posts

Trump And Republicans Aren’t Likely To Have Total Control Of The Governmment For Long

Trump and the Republicans are racing the clock because recent history shows that they won't…

11 hours ago

CDC Employees Are Resigning In Droves As They Refuse To Work For RFK Jr.

Trump's nomination of RFK Jr. to run Health and Human Services has resulted in CDC…

15 hours ago

Top Senate Democrat Tells House Ethics Committee To Preserve Matt Gaetz Report

Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) has told the House Ethics Committee to…

1 day ago

Matt Gaetz’s Nomination To Be Attorney General May Already Be Doomed

Trump's nomination of Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) to be Attorney General may be doomed to…

2 days ago

Trump’s Immigration Plan To Kill Jobs And Raise Prices

Economists are warning that Trump's mass deportation plan will kill American jobs and raise prices. 

3 days ago

Trump Has Already Created A Problem For Mike Johnson In The House

It will take months for Republicans to fill the House seats that will be left…

3 days ago