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We're getting close to a number on appropriations, but Democrats are trying to add something new that's never been part of this before. They want to limit the executive branch's ability to do its job, which would tie the President's hands on expenditures. This is a gross separation of powers violation and a terrible precedent. It's a nonstarter for us, and the Democrats know that. So it looks like they're making individual appropriations bills almost impossible. There's more discussion to be had as we near the March 14 deadline. I'm hopeful they'll back off those outrageous demands because they're unprecedented and unconstitutional. The Democrats are likely trying to address the unitary theory of the executive, limiting the executive branch's ability to impound or rescind funds. This is a constitutional fight, and you likely won't get any Democrat votes on this CR. Get ready for a potential government shutdown.

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Republicans cheered after winning a Senate vote that will take away healthcare from around 17,000,000 people, give tax breaks to billionaires, and increase the national debt by $3.5 trillion. The bill is economically and morally bad, but the fight continues. Democrats were able to improve some aspects of the bill, such as removing the tax on solar and wind. The bill now goes to the House, where some Republicans are uneasy. In November 2026, those who voted for the bill will have to face voters and explain their actions. The fight continues because it is the right thing to do.

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Trump says the administration removed wasteful items from the budget, which upset Congresswoman Ocasio Cortez and the socialist wing of the Democratic Party. They took out items that existed under President Biden and are demanding they be put back in. Examples cited include: $3,000,000 for circumcision and vasectomies in Zambia; $500,000 of American taxpayer money for electric buses in Rwanda; $3,600,000 for pastry cooking classes and dance focus groups for male prostitutes in Haiti. I kid you not. $6,000,000 for media organizations for the Palestinians; $833,000 for transgender people in Nepal; $300,000 for a pride parade in Lesotho; $882,000 for social media and mentorship in Serbia; $4,200,000; $4,200,000 for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and intersex people in the Western Balkans and Uganda. The congresswoman and the socialist wing threaten to shut down the government till we get this back in. The fight is about putting this back in the bill.

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We're witnessing the implications of having Dogecoin integrated into our system, heavily influenced by Elon Musk. The current bill proposes cutting funding for crucial research areas, including pediatric cancer, early detection of cervical and breast cancer, and conditions like Down syndrome and sickle cell anemia. These cuts are aimed at providing tax breaks for billionaires, reflecting Musk's idea of efficiency.

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Republicans are pushing for a government shutdown that could harm the economy and negatively impact working-class Americans. Their focus seems to be on providing significant tax cuts for wealthy donors instead of funding essential programs like cancer research for children.

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Republicans are playing political games with censure resolutions because they're failing. Trump promised lower grocery prices, but they're rising. The stock market is falling, and inflation is up. Trump and House Republicans are crashing the economy. They haven't proposed any measures to improve the economic circumstances of Americans. This resolution is a distraction from their failures. House Democrats will focus on issues that matter to Americans. Every House Democrat voted against the reckless Republican budget. We stand with Medicaid and the American people, while Republicans side with their billionaire puppet masters like Elon Musk.

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House Republicans will continue to push the Save Act, which aims to ensure legal and constitutional elections. Republicans claim nearly every Democrat opposes the Save Act and wants "illegals" to vote. They intend to include secure elections as part of government funding discussions. Republicans will fight for this principle along with border security. Chuck Schumer has failed to put anything on the floor to ensure only legal American citizens are able to vote and has refused to pass HR 2, the Secure the Border Act, to return to Trump's border policies. Kamala Harris owns the economic, national security, and humanitarian open border crisis that her policies created.

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Elon Musk did not create USAID; that was established by the United States Congress for the American people. He also does not have the authority to dismantle it. We will prevent him from doing so. Although Musk may have gained control over certain financial systems, he does not control the money of the American people—that power lies with Congress under Article 1 of the Constitution. Just as the elected president cannot withhold public funds, there is no separate branch of government led by Elon Musk, and this distinction will become increasingly clear.

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The Democrats complain that nobody voted for Elon or my cabinet nominees and claim people are dying because of budget cuts while also calling my actions illegal. Their reaction shows we must be over the target and doing something right. We're trying to restore the will of the people through the president. There's a vast, unelected federal bureaucracy implacably opposed to the president and the cabinet. Consider that DC voting is 92% for Kamala. If the president's will, representing the people, isn't implemented, then the will of the people isn't being implemented. We're not living in a democracy, but a bureaucracy. What you're seeing is the bureaucracy resisting as we try to restore democracy and the will of the people.

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Republicans' nihilism has brought the country to the brink of a government shutdown at midnight unless Congress acts. Democrats offered to fund the government for another month, but Republicans rejected this because Donald Trump wants full control over government spending. The choice is between proceeding with the bill or risking a shutdown, which would give Trump more power. While the Republican bill is deeply partisan and doesn't address many needs, allowing Trump to take more power via a shutdown is worse. No one wants a shutdown. Members who oppose the CR want Republicans to take their responsibilities more seriously and negotiate spending bills that address the needs of the American people. The Republican party is the party of Trump, and allowing him to take more power via a shutdown is a worse option than passing the CR.

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My Republican colleagues, led by Donald Trump, are in a meltdown because their presidential nominee and policies are unpopular. They are pushing for a nationwide abortion ban and their project 2025 is failing. Democrats just want to focus on moving the country forward and prioritizing people over politics.

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The Democrats' potential government shutdown to block the current administration's actions is a serious consideration. We're facing a constitutional crisis due to illegal actions, and I won't support funding that allows this lawlessness to continue. A shutdown is a last resort, but necessary if they won't govern responsibly. The globalist system is collapsing, and the current administration is dismantling its institutions and philosophies. This is a revolution, a new power structure, and while I don't agree with everything, this is largely what I would do to counter a depopulation plan. The left is disintegrating; they're losing elections and panicking. The public is awakening. Democrats are plotting to shut down the government, not just spending bills, but through sabotage. This isn't about fighting over who steals the most; it's about dismantling corrupt systems. My platform, Infowars, is under attack. Lawfare and attempts to shut us down have caused financial issues. Support us by purchasing products from AlexJonesStore.com; it could be your last chance.

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Appropriations is where the money moves in Congress. Democrats are making lives smoother through government funding. Republicans' Project 2025 is suspect, aiming to eliminate the Department of Education. This would negatively impact the environment, education, and rights. Democrats are keeping people informed.

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Some Republican senators are obstructing the efforts of their majority party to work constructively with Democrats. They are stopping the Department of Justice, which is absurd. Senator Roger Marshall supports Senator Tommy Tuberville's stance on the sanctity of life and abortion policy in the Pentagon. Tuberville is holding up Pentagon nominations, causing delays in the process. While there are ways to bypass these holds, Democratic leaders are hesitant to use them due to time constraints and senators being frequently absent or on recess.

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I'm heading to Capitol Hill. They’re voting on the Shutdown Fairness Act today, but I figured something out. I think I understand why this shutdown is happening: why would the Democrats shut down the government, depriving federal workers and the military of pay and food, and depriving the military of their health care through Tricare? It doesn’t make sense. It has nothing to do with it being the far left or against Trump. It has to do with the insurance companies. The people responsible are insurance companies like United Healthcare, Aetna, Molina, Kaiser. They are getting paid every single month from the treasury, even as the government is shut down. So the insurance companies are getting mandatory payments while federal workers and the military get nothing. This isn’t about health care in the abstract; it’s about dark money from billion-dollar insurance companies. If they lose the ACA credits for next year, they won’t get any of that money. Tax credits are paid on behalf of the insured, and they go directly to the insurance companies. That’s why Democrats are fighting so hard on this: it has nothing to do with people’s premiums per se. It has to do with the insurance companies not getting billions and billions of dollars in January and next year. The shutdown, to me, finally makes sense: it’s about the billion-dollar insurance companies. And so much of the Democrats’ talking points—about premiums—miss the point. These are not market rates; they’re set by the insurance companies. They’re the ones deciding to keep people without health care. The government isn’t the main bottleneck; if anything, the government is helping the problem. The problem is the insurance companies. They set premiums, and their providers own hospitals and set obscene rates for procedures, profiting off the hospitals. This entire shutdown is about dark money from corporations like United Healthcare, Aetna, Kaiser, Molina, and their influence on our politicians. That’s why the government is shut down right now. The idea that Democrats might be acting because insurers threaten to withhold funding for reelection finally clicks. It’s all about health insurance companies, not about people trying to access health care. If the goal were to make access to care cheaper, they would force insurers to quit raising premiums and put a cap on those premiums every year.

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Under president Biden, they were spending $3,000,000 for circumcisions and vasectomies in Zambia; we took that out. The congresswoman says, we're gonna shut down government till you put that back in. We found $500,000 for electric buses in Rwanda and $3,600,000 for pastry cooking classes and dance focus groups for male prostitutes in Haiti—again, we took it out. Ocasio Cortez and the socialist wing of the Democratic Party say we gotta put these back in or shut the government down. They demand: $6,000,000 for media organizations for the Palestinians; $833,000 for transgender people in Nepal; $4,200,000 for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and intersex people in the Western Balkans and Uganda. We took all that out; it upsets Ocasio Cortez, and they threaten all other Democrats to shut down the government till they get what they want.

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The Democrat party is trying to stop President Trump from sending rapists out of the country and from making energy affordable. They're trying to stop him from ending wars overseas and preventing nuclear winter. Democrats want to protect fiery bureaucrats who suck up resources and money. They want men in dresses in the military, men in women's sports, and men in women's private spaces. The Democrat agenda is to kill the golden age, make everyone crazy, suck all the joy and happiness out of our lives, and let illegal alien rapists and criminals have their way with the country.

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Republican rejection leads to a Hobson's choice: proceed with the bill or risk a shutdown orchestrated by Donald Trump. While the CR bill is bad, a shutdown would be much worse for America. The Republican bill is a terrible option. It is not a clean CR and is deeply partisan, failing to address many of the country's needs. However, allowing Donald Trump to take more power via a government shutdown is a far worse option. No one on my side of the aisle wants a government shutdown. Members who support this CR do not want a government shutdown, and members who oppose this CR do not want a government shutdown.

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Day two of the "Democrat shutdown." 44 Senate Democrats voted to reject the "completely nonpartisan, completely clean, very simple 24 page continuing resolution" the House passed two weeks ago, instead of keeping the government open for seven weeks. Republicans say they moved in good faith: 12 appropriations bills passed by committees, the Senate and House have acted, and a conference committee finalized. With a September 30 deadline, the clean CR would allow more time for negotiations. Democrats filed a counter proposal described as a "wild list of partisan priorities," including "a half a billion dollars to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting" and removing the "rural hospital fund," while "repealing the health provisions of the one big beautiful bill," "ending Obamacare funding for noncitizens," and "Medicaid funding for those improperly granted asylum and parole." They claim at least "$200,000,000,000" would go to illegal aliens. They urge Americans to call their senators to open the government now, blaming Schumer for the shutdown.

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The Republicans are currently voting on amendments for funding bills, and it's crucial that they come to an agreement to avoid a government shutdown. This disagreement is essentially between the hard right and the even harder right within the GOP. Unfortunately, under Kevin McCarthy's leadership, it seems difficult to govern. However, it's important that they find a way to keep the government running because ordinary Americans will suffer if they don't. There's a bipartisan continuing resolution supported by both Democrats and Republicans in the Senate, and I hope the House will have the opportunity to vote on it and work together in a bipartisan manner.

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Democrats face challenges as Trump and Musk threaten government funding sources that have supported them for decades, which could lead to the collapse of their coalition. A large part of the Democratic party holds secular religious beliefs, such as transgenderism, open borders, and the idea that America is not unique. They believe it's good to have millions of people enter the country, and that work requirements are inherently bad. Congress has a duty called oversight, and there were senators and congress people that were asking USAID, for example, and other departments for an accounting of their money. They would get back nebulous, obscure, obtuse answers, which tells me that the Democrats knew what they were doing. They knew the American people would not want their money spent this way, but they did it anyway. Trump is described as using a "sledgehammer" to attack the establishment, unlike Reagan, and the American people will support him when they realize how bad the situation is.

Breaking Points

Bernie RIPS TRUMP A Government Shutdown BEGINS
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Midnight tolls in as a government shutdown becomes official, and Breaking Points dives into what that means for policy and people. The hosts welcome Democrat Jeff Mkeley and Virginia Republican Ben Klein, a Freedom Caucus member, to present the competing perspectives as the crisis unfolds. They flag the stakes beyond politics, including subsidies for Obamacare and the broader fight over who qualifies, while predicting a long, stubborn impasse because neither side has a strong incentive to blink. They also tease foreign policy headlines and energy costs as context. On health policy, Democrats insist on preserving ACA subsidies from the pandemic era, arguing that lower premium costs and protections for people with pre-existing conditions depend on keeping the subsidies active. They point to a Wall Street Journal summary that the subsidies aim to restore coverage for lawfully present migrants and others, a position Republicans frame as extending aid to non-citizens. Republicans reply that subsidies distort the marketplace, risk subsidizing insurers and wealthy beneficiaries, and fail to address the underlying inflation of premiums, especially for rural hospitals. Klein adds that a clean CR should precede any broad reform. Across the economics and governance angle, the discussion turns to executive tools and spending authority. A Center for Renewing America piece by Eric Titel is cited to describe the president’s potential to use empoundment and recission to curb spending if Congress delays, a concept the hosts compare to household budgeting. The panel then probes party dynamics: Bernie Sanders and Hakeem Jeffries versus Trumpism, MTG’s sharp critiques of the GOP, and Trump’s meme tactics that critics label childish. The exchange frames a broader question: who owns messaging when policy stalls? Real-world consequences loom as the hosts outline the shutdown’s impact: as many as four million federal workers could be affected, with some military personnel and TSA staff deemed essential and others not paid if the lapse persists. National parks may close; data collection by the Bureau of Labor Statistics could falter; and the administration’s contingency plans come under scrutiny. They also flag the budget fight’s domestic stories, including a Grain Markets segment on the Argentinian soybean battle, and the political calculus of a fight that could endure weeks or longer.

Breaking Points

Dem Congressman Blasts Party's "CRINGE" Trump Pushback
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Congressman Rana discussed a recent Twitter exchange with Elon Musk regarding a vote to subpoena Musk for testimony about his actions, which Rana believes are unconstitutional. He clarified that he supports Musk's transparency and accountability. Rana emphasized the need for Congress to assert its authority, particularly concerning the debt ceiling, and criticized Musk's influence over government spending decisions. He expressed concern about Musk's power as a private citizen impacting public policy and the necessity for more diverse social media platforms to counterbalance Musk's influence. Rana noted that constituents are frustrated with Democratic leadership's response to Musk and Trump, calling for a clearer plan to assert congressional power. He highlighted the importance of standing up to Musk and Trump, suggesting that Democrats need to unify and take a tougher stance. Rana also pointed out that many Republicans fear losing their positions if they oppose Trump, which complicates bipartisan efforts to uphold congressional authority. Overall, he stressed the urgency of addressing what he sees as a constitutional crisis stemming from Musk's actions.

Breaking Points

Watch Saagar CONFRONT White House On Massie Primary
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The House passed a continuing resolution spending bill by 217 to 213, with Thomas Massie voting no. President Trump criticized Massie for not supporting the bill, emphasizing the need for Republicans to unite to keep the government funded. The Senate now faces a deadline to avert a shutdown, with Democrats holding significant leverage. JD Vance noted that Republicans would likely be blamed if a shutdown occurs. The dynamics have shifted, with Democrats pressured by their base to fight against cuts to federal programs. The influence of Trump and Elon Musk is reshaping Republican politics, diminishing the Tea Party's rebellion.

Breaking Points

Dem Senator ACCIDENTALLY ADMITS USAID Is CIA Front
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The hosts discuss the ongoing political landscape, focusing on the implications of Elon Musk's influence over government agencies, particularly USAID. They highlight the temporary removal of Canada and Mexico tariffs while China tariffs remain. Matt Stoller will provide insights on the tariff regime and the weakened National Labor Relations Board and Securities Exchange Commission. The DOJ's new DEI program to combat anti-Semitism faces criticism from both sides. The hosts analyze Trump's comments on Musk's role, emphasizing concerns over conflicts of interest and the potential dismantling of USAID, which is being absorbed into the State Department. They debate the political ramifications for Democrats, questioning the wisdom of defending USAID, a less popular agency. The conversation shifts to Musk's anarcho-capitalist ideology and his desire to reduce federal government power, raising alarms about the implications for essential services. The hosts express skepticism about the public's support for cutting federal programs that benefit citizens. They conclude with the potential for legal challenges against Musk's access to the Treasury Department's payment system and the upcoming debt ceiling showdown, emphasizing the need for vigilance in protecting democratic institutions.
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