EXCLUSIVE | Pro-Trump Sen. Eric Schmitt: ‘We Changed the Rules’ as MAGA Base Explodes Over Pro Forma Sessions Blocking Trump Recess Appointments * The Gateway Pundit * by Alicia Powe

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Across X and conservative media, outrage is exploding over pro forma Senate sessions — those 30-second gavel-ins that appear to deliberately block President Donald Trump from making recess appointments.

Disgusting.” “Betrayal.” “RINO.” and “Primary them.”

Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley took the heaviest fire after gaveling one in the day  after Memorial Day. Senators James Lankford and John Hoeven were also hammered for doing the same during the Fourth of July recess. Since Trump’s second term began, more than 30 GOP senators have presided over these empty procedural sessions, convincing many in the base that the GOP Senate is choosing “tradition” over Trump’s mandate.

But one of Trump’s strongest allies in the Senate says the real story is being missed.

In an exclusive interview with The Gateway Pundit, Sen. Eric Schmitt, R-MO, revealed that Senate Republicans quietly changed the rules early in Trump’s second term to smash Democratic obstruction — and insists the pro forma sessions are not stopping Trump’s appointments.

Schmitt said:

When the Democrats were blocking the appointments…we actually changed the rules. So, we can do en bloc appointments now.

It used to be, you had to do one by one. Democrats were dragging that out, and you had a record low number of appointments. Now because we changed the rules to do the en bloc appointments, we are actually ahead of pace than President Trump’s first term…We are getting those nominations through. So, it’s a different process now — we changed the rules. We were… anticipating the Democrats’ obstructionism. We… accounted for that and I think that’s a good development.

Schmitt directly addressed the anger:
No, no. I get it. As one of President Trump’s closest allies, the last thing we want to do is hold up his appointments. So, we are moving forward.

WATCH:

Senate records show Republicans have confirmed more than 340 nominees so far this term, ahead of the pace at this point in Trump’s first term, largely thanks to en bloc, batch votes.  However, many high-profile and contentious picks remain delayed in committee or on the floor, keeping frustration high among the base.

WHAT ARE THESE PRO-FORMA SESSIONS? 

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They are brief, often seconds-long meetings where one senator gavels in and out with zero business conducted. The move keeps the Senate technically “in session,” blocking the president’s constitutional power to make recess appointments. Democrats weaponized this tactic for years. Now, even with Republicans in full control, the practice continues — triggering a firestorm from the Trump base.

Voters see senators on long recesses while critical nominees sit idle and deep state holdovers remain entrenched.

‘WE’RE ACTUALLY AHEAD OF SCHEDULE’

The Missouri senator says the shift to en bloc, batch confirmations has Trump’s nomination pace ahead of his first term; Republicans are not sabotaging the President— they’re outmaneuvering the opposition.

Whether this explanation cools the fury remains to be seen.

Congress as a whole and the Senate specifically continue to face deeply negative public views. As of July 16, 2026, Ballotpedia’s polling index showed congressional approval at 26% approve/58% disapprove.

Other polls have been even worse, including an Economist/YouGov poll that found 15% approval/66% disapproval.

In that toxic environment, the backlash over pro forma sessions has hit a raw nerve with the GOP base.

Photo of author Alicia Powe Alicia is an investigative journalist and multimedia reporter. Alicia's work is featured on numerous outlets including the Gateway Pundit, Project Veritas, Red Voice Media, World Net Daily, Townhall and Media Research Center, where she uncovers fraud and abuse in government, media, Big Tech, Big Pharma and public corruption. Alicia has a Bachelor of Science in Political Science from John Jay College of Criminal Justice. She served in the Correspondence Department of the George W. Bush administration and as a War Room analyst for the Rudy Giuliani Presidential Committee.

You can email Alicia Powe here, and read more of Alicia Powe's articles here.

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