US Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) speaks to reporters as Senate Democratic leaders are holding a press conference on September 9, 2025, following a weekly policy lunch at Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C.
Elizabeth Franz | Reuters
Congressional Democrats focus on healthcare as a key fixed point in negotiations with the threat of government shutdowns.
New York Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer and House Democrat leader Hicombe Jeffries have said they don’t support GOP-backed laws to maintain government funding unless they include certain healthcare provisions.
“We have made it clear that under no circumstances will we never support a partisan Republican spending bill that will continue to tear health care from the American people,” Jeffries said on the House floor this week.
With funding the brink, Congressional Democrats require laws that avoid closures include an extension of the Affordable Care Act tax credit that is due to expire at the end of the year unless Congress intervene.
If the tax credits disappear, the average premium could rise by around 75%, according to KFF, a nonpartisan health policy research group.
According to KFF, the majority of Americans with ACA Marketplace health plans received a premium tax credit in 2025.
Democrats have also repeatedly criticised Medicaid cuts, part of “one big beautiful bill,” and want Republicans to reverse them.
As Democrats seem to hold it tight, their new hardline complicates negotiations before September 30th, when government funds are now expired.
The unified House Republican Congress can pass the law without democratic support, but Senate Republicans need democratic support given the thin majority of razors.
In March, Schumer joined Republicans and avoided government shutdowns, but his move drew sharp criticism from his party.
Now, looking at the 2026 midterm elections, Schumer and his Democratic colleagues show that they do not support government funding laws that do not include major concessions.
However, Republicans seem unlikely to be caught up in the demands of democratic lawmakers.
President Donald Trump rejected the Democrats’ demands and told Fox News this week that “they have something wrong with them.”
“If you give them all your dreams right now… they want to give them money to destroy the country. If you give them all your dreams, they won’t vote for it,” Trump said of “Fox and their friends.”
Senate Majority Leader John Tune, Rs.D. He also accused Democrats of “screaming” for shutting down the government.
“They want to fight the Trump administration,” Tune told Punchbowl News. “Fly Out Day.”
“But they have no good reason to do that, and I am not going to give them a good reason to do that,” he continued.
As time increases, lawmakers may pursue suspension measures to keep funding stable in federal agencies.
But even reaching that temporary solution becomes a difficult battle.
