Karoline Leavitt DESTROYS Dems for 'holding America hostage'

www.dailymail.co.uk

By ROSS IBBETSON, US ASSISTANT EDITOR

Updated:

Karoline Leavitt laid the government shutdown at the Democratic Party's door on Friday as the impasse entered its third day.

The White House Press Secretary said: 'The Democrats continue to recklessly hold the American people hostage over their demands to give illegal aliens free healthcare.'

She said that the Republican Party was 'fully unified' behind a continuing resolution (CR) that will fund the government through November 21. She said that this bill was no no different to the CR backed by the Democrats in March.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer came under intense criticism for supporting the stopgap funding bill from progressives like Alexandra Ocasio Cortez.

Schumer is dug in this time around and is refusing to end the government shutdown until billions of dollars worth of Obamacare insurance premiums are included in the budget.

The Republicans say that this would give free healthcare back to more than one million illegal migrants who were stripped of the benefit in Donald Trump's Big Beautiful Bill.

The shutdown began at midnight on Wednesday meaning many government services are temporarily suspended and workers are furloughed.

Leavitt today warned that this included 1.3 million military personnel who are not being paid as they 'serve honorably and put their lives on the line to defend us all.'

00:26

Karoline Leavitt said: 'The Democrats continue to recklessly hold the American people hostage over their demands to give illegal aliens free healthcare.

'Republicans are fully unified behind passing non-partisan clean funding bill, the exact same bill that Democrats approved back in March to re-open the federal government.

'But those same senate Democrats are now voting against that bill and keeping the people's government closed ...

'There are significant personal impacts on millions of Americans as a result of this current government shutdown, the 1.3 million men and women of America's Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard and Space Force, who serve honorably and put their lives on the line to defend us all are not being paid.

'Military families are already seeking out food assistance because of financial anxiety caused by this Democrat shutdown.'

Leavitt says Senate Dems 'holding Americans hostage' amid shutdown

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01:08

Republican vote fails as shutdown extends into next week

Democrat senators voted against the House-passed Republican bill again on Friday — meaning the government shutdown will now extend into Monday.

The Senate failed to back the GOP bill in a 54 to 44 vote. Sixty votes are required to back the bill.

Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky was the only Republican opposed.

Democratic senators John Fetterman of Pennsylvania and Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada voted in favor, as well as independent senator Angus King of Maine. The trio backed the Republican bill on Wednesday.

There were no additional Democrat defections to the Republican side as Senate Minority Leader Chuch Schumer's opposition held firm.

00:15

Democratic vote to end shutdown fails to pass

The Senate has rejected a Democratic bill to reopen the federal government.

It needed 60 votes to pass, but only 46 lawmakers backed the motion.

22:41

Top Republicans say they are under no pressure to secure a deal with Democrats

Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune doubled down on Friday, insisting they are under no pressure to cave to Democratic demands as the government shutdown entered its third day.

'There is nothing to negotiate,' Thune said, standing beside Johnson at the Capitol.

'Hopefully over the weekend, they'll have a chance to think about it,' Thune added. 'Maybe some of these conversations start to result in something to where we can start moving some votes and actually get this thing passed.'

Democrats are demanding an extension of expiring Obamacare subsidies before they can reach an agreement with the Republicans. The GOP says this would involve funding healthcare for 1.4 million illegal immigrants.

Thune said that he anticipates 'good sense' will eventually take effect and enough Democratic senators will defect to back a continuation resolution that will fund the government through November 21.

Johnson accused Senate Democratic Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of pushing the shutdown because the veteran New Yorker is 'terrified' of left-wing activists grabbing his seat in 2028 elections.

'Chuck Schumer is a far-left, progressive politician but he's not far enough left for this base and so he's got to show a fight against the president,' Johnson said.

epa12428380 US Senate Majority Leader John Thune (C), accompanied by US House Speaker Mike Johnson (R), speaks during a press conference at the US Capitol, in Washington DC, USA, 03 October 2025. The US government shutdown has entered its 3rd day without reaching a consensus on the federal budget. The US Senate is due to vote again on budget legislation to reopen the government.  EPA/WILL OLIVER

21:52

Elizabeth Warren GOES NUTS as CBS anchor confronts her with the truth about healthcare for illegals

Senator Warren insists Medicaid gives no assistance to illegal aliens

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21:44

Republicans believe they can crack Democrat senators... but Schumer's inner circle are tough

Republicans are targeting moderate Democratic senators who backed a March continuing resolution (CR) earlier this year to avert a government shutdown.

The bipartisan measure, which extended funding through September, garnered support from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who convinced his inner circle including Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin, Kirsten Gillibrand, and Brian Schatz, to back the CR.

However, this time around — after being heavily criticized by progressives like Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez — Schumer doesn't want to show any weakness.

Durbin and Gillibrand are seen as highly unlikely to break ranks with Schumer.

The math for the Republicans to reach the 60 votes required is unforgiving.

Two Democratic senators and Independent Angus King backed the CR on Wednesday — but the GOP need another five Democrats to defect.

21:21

20:45

CNN pundit says 'dementia-addled' Trump is not willing to negotiate deal

A popular progressive pundit has claimed that Donald Trump is suffering from dementia and is not interested in negotiating a deal to end the government shutdown.

Jack Cocchiarella, 23, made the remarks on CNN's Laura Coates Live on Thursday.

When asked about the dynamic being seen between Democrats and Republicans, the Gen-Z commentator said, 'it doesn't seem like much of a give and take right now', before honing in on recent rumors surrounding Trumps' fitness for the presidency.

'The only thing that Donald Trump seems willing to give is his "Trump 2028" hat out to Chuck Schumer and of course Hakeem Jeffries, who it doesn't really seem if he knows who that is at this point,' Cocchiarella said.

'Trump to me is kind of this dementia-addled, really nursing home patient in the White House right now.

'He's leaning on [Russell] Vought, he's leaning on Stephen Miller because he doesn't want to get the job done.'

CNN guest calls Trump 'dementia-addled nursing home patient'

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20:26

Senate to vote on ending shutdown at 1.30pm

The Senate is expected to vote again on ending the government shutdown as it stretched into its third day on Friday.

The House-passed Republican bill would fund the government until November 21 but the Democrats are demanding an extension to healthcare tax credits.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune said it's 'unlikely' the upper chamber would work through weekend to end the shutdown if today's vote at 1.30pm fails.

Traders are currently betting that the shutdown will last for 15 days. Prices on the regulated exchange and prediction market site Kalshi implied the chances of a shutdown lasting more than 10 days are 70 percent.

Odds that the shutdown will extend more than 15 days imply a 48 percent chance.

19:14

Jeffries says 'Trump shutdown' is because Republicans refuse to provide healthcare 'to Americans'

Democratic House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries appeared on MSNBC on Friday morning to blame Donald Trump for the government shutdown.

Democrats are demanding healthcare funding that Republicans say will put 1.4million illegal immigrants back on Medicaid after they were removed by Trump's Big Beautiful Bill.

18:32

Trump's hatchet man freezes $2.1bn in funds for blue city Chicago

Donald Trump 's budget hawk has frozen $2.1billion in federal funds to the Democratic city of Chicago as Republicans seek to leverage the government shutdown.

Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Russell Vought — the architect of Project 2025 — has taken center stage since the shutdown began at midnight on Wednesday.

Vought is responsible for some three million federal jobs and has warned that thousands of workers are set to lose their livelihoods.

In addition, he has targeted Democratic strongholds across the country by freezing federal funds for infrastructure projects — including the New York districts of Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.

His latest target is Chicago, taking aim at the far-left mayor Brandon Johnson, as well as Illinois Democratic senators Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth.

Vought posted on X: '$2.1 billion in Chicago infrastructure projects — specifically the Red Line Extension and the Red and Purple Modernization Project — have been put on hold to ensure funding is not flowing via race-based contracting.'

Trump has given his full support to the OMB director, stating that the 'Democrat agencies' in Washington DC are largely 'a political scam.'

(FILES) OMB Director Russell Vought (2nd R) speaks about the upcoming wildfire and hurricane seasons alongside US President Donald Trump (L), Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum (2nd L), and Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem (R) in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on June 10, 2025. US President Donald Trump will meet his budget chief Russell Vought on October 2, 2025, to determine which federal agencies to cut amid a federal government shutdown that he has hailed as an "unprecedented opportunity." (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP) (Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

18:17

Trump warns Dems of federal jobs bloodbath: 'Here comes the reaper'

Donald Trump continued taunting the Democrats overnight as he posted a meme depicting Russell Vought as the grim reaper.

'Fear the reaper': Trump mocks Democrats with gov. shutdown video

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18:10

Wall Street rockets despite shutdown risk

Wall Street nudged past yesterday's record highs in early trading Friday as investors continue to shrug off the government shutdown, now in its third day.

Futures for S&P 500, Nasdaq and the Dow Jones Industrial Average all added 0.2 percent before the bell. All three closed at record levels on Thursday, boosted by gains of chipmakers and artificial intelligence companies.

Markets have largely ignored the shutdown after Democrat and Republican lawmakers failed to reach agreement on funding.

Jobs data due this week has been delayed as federal agencies that publish the financial news are hit by the shutdown. An even more consequential report, the monthly tally of jobs gains and losses that usually comes out the first Friday of every month, will also not arrive as scheduled.

That increases uncertainty for Wall Street traders who are betting that the job market is slowing enough to convince the Federal Reserve to continue slashing rates.

Images of US President Donald Trump are displayed on a desk as traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) at the opening bell in New York on September 15, 2025. Wall Street stocks mostly advanced early Monday, bolstered by hopes that the Federal Reserve will soon make its first interest rate cut of 2025 and positive signals at the end of US-China economic talks in Madrid. (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP) (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images)

17:46

Trump doubles down on memes as Dems cry 'racism'

Donald Trump doubled down in his meme war against top Democrats last night despite allegations of racism.

Trump posted an AI video on Thursday night, re-imagining his meeting with House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries as Democrats sought to thrash out a deal with the president earlier this week.

In the video, Trump throws a MAGA hat onto Jeffries' head and then points and laughs at him.

It comes after Jeffries complained that Trump had shared a 'racist' meme of him wearing a sombrero.

JD Vance responded to Jeffries that the memes would stop if he supported a Republican funding stopgap.

'I'll tell Hakeem Jeffries right now, I make this solemn promise to you, that if you help us reopen the government, the sombrero memes will stop,' he told reporters at the White House on Wednesday.

17:38

Russell Vought hammers blue states

The Trump administration is cancelling $7.6 billion in grants that supported hundreds of clean energy projects in 16 states, all of which voted for Democrat Kamala Harris in last year's presidential election.

The move comes as President Donald Trump threatens deep cuts in his fight with congressional Democrats over the government shutdown.

The Energy Department said in a statement Thursday that 223 projects were terminated after a review determined they did not adequately advance the nation´s energy needs or were not economically viable. Officials did not provide details about which projects are being cut, but said funding came from the Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, and other DOE bureaus.

The cuts are likely to affect battery plants, hydrogen technology projects, upgrades to the electric grid and carbon-capture efforts, among many others, according to the environmental nonprofit Natural Resources Defense Council.

Russell Vought, the White House budget director, highlighted the cutbacks in a social media post late Wednesday, saying money 'to fuel the Left's climate agenda is being cancelled.'

He said projects are on the chopping block in: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Vermont and Washington state.