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Trump won’t even discuss protecting health care for millions.

by Alex Samuels
Daily Kos Staff

President Donald Trump has blown up talks to avoid a government shutdown—just days before funding runs out.

Congress faces a Sept. 30 deadline to keep the lights on. Without a deal, federal agencies will close and thousands of workers will be furloughed. Republicans have proposed a stopgap bill to maintain funding through Nov. 21 while they work on full-year spending bills. Democrats,
meanwhile, are using the looming deadline to push for health care protections—and they were supposed to press their case directly to Trump this week.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries had requested a face-to-face meeting with the president to break the stalemate. By Tuesday morning, Trump had agreed. But just hours later, he changed his mind.

In a Tuesday morning Truth Social post, Trump said he was canceling the sit-down with the two New York Democrats, dismissing it as pointless.

“After reviewing the details of the unserious and ridiculous demands being made by the Minority Radical Left Democrats in return for their Votes to keep our thriving Country open, I have decided that no meeting with their Congressional Leaders could possibly be productive,” Trump wrote.

He accused Democrats of “threatening to shut down the Government of the United States” unless Republicans agreed to more health care funding for groups he has repeatedly criticized. Trump has left the door open to talks “if they get serious about the future of our Nation.”

“We must keep the Government open, and legislate like true Patriots rather than hold American Citizens hostage, knowing that they want our now thriving Country closed,” Trump added. “Otherwise, it will just be another long and brutal slog through their radicalized quicksand.”

Democrats want to protect health care for millions. Their proposal would reverse Republican-backed Medicaid cuts enacted under the GOP’s tax and immigration bill and extend enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies, which are set to expire on Dec. 30.

Republicans have flatly rejected rolling back the Medicaid cuts, calling it a nonstarter. And they’re accusing Democrats of using the threat of a shutdown to jam through their wish list.

Schumer blasted Trump’s about-face, saying the president “ran away from the negotiating table before he even got there.”

“While Americans face rising costs and a Republican health care crisis, Trump would rather throw a tantrum than do his job,” Schumer told NBC News. “Democrats are ready to work to avoid a shutdown—Trump and Republicans are holding America hostage. Donald Trump will own the shutdown.”

Schumer’s office did not immediately respond to Daily Kos’ request for comment.

Jeffries, meanwhile, was even sharper on X, calling Republicans “extremists” willing to close the government rather than “address the Republican health care crisis that is devastating America.”

He added, “Trump Always Chickens Out,” reviving a slogan Democrats have used since Trump’s erratic rollout of tariffs earlier this year.

Other Democrats piled on. Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut put it bluntly: “This is delusional but you don’t have to read the whole thing,” he posted on social media. “Boils down to:
[Trump is] shutting down the government because he thinks he’s a king.”

The partisan showdown has already deadlocked Congress once. Last week, Senate Democrats blocked Republicans’ plan to extend current funding through Sept. 30 without touching health care. Republicans responded by blocking the Democrats’ counteroffer, which would have extended funding through only Oct. 31 but rolled back GOP health care cuts.

“The Republican bill is a clean, nonpartisan, short-term continuing resolution to fund the government to give us time to do the full appropriations process,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune said last week. “And the Democrat bill is the exact opposite.”

With about a week left until the funding deadline, the two sides are locked in a staring contest. Without movement from Trump, Democrats say they won’t supply the votes Republicans need to hit 60 in the Senate—meaning the country is barreling toward its first shutdown since 2019.
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ScreamingFox · 41-45, F
I don't know how my son and I are going to make it
And who was the president in the shutdown in 2019.....? Can't think of the name, myself....
CougarLisa · 36-40, F
Get a job...
JSul3 · 70-79
@sunsporter1649 A picture of you.
Thanks for sharing!
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Americans didn't demand "what would protect their health". The Dems don't do it better!
No sympathy. Y'all silence and ignore, bully and isolate people who simplify and tell you what works!
Off. Go away.
sunsporter1649 · 70-79, M
LOL, we really need to keep giving free health care to illegal aliens and keep ignoring American citizens, right?
JSul3 · 70-79
@sunsporter1649
Analysis from policy research groups, health experts, and recent legislation indicates that Donald Trump's healthcare plans could cause significant harm to red states, particularly those that did not expand Medicaid. The potential negative impacts are primarily due to the expiration of federal subsidies for Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace plans and proposed cuts to Medicaid.



Many Republican-led states that did not expand Medicaid have a large portion of their population relying on the ACA marketplace for coverage. Under Trump's healthcare agenda, these states would be disproportionately affected by the loss of enhanced premium tax credits, leading to higher premiums and potential coverage losses for millions.

Florida: Could see up to 2.2 million people become uninsured if enhanced subsidies expire and premiums spike.

Texas: Estimates suggest that 1.7 million residents could lose their health insurance due to expiring tax credits and new regulations that create more barriers to enrollment.

Other non-expansion states: Projections from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities indicate that states like Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, and Tennessee are expected to experience significant coverage loss.

New legislation passed by Republicans in 2025, which enacted much of Trump's domestic agenda, includes cuts to Medicaid that will severely affect both red and blue states.
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected that the bill's changes could result in 10 million more uninsured Americans by 2034.

Red states, many of which already spend less per Medicaid enrollee, could be forced to make deep cuts to their programs or raise taxes to compensate for the reduction in federal funding.
Many of these states also have a higher proportion of rural hospitals, which will be particularly vulnerable to financial strain from absorbing the cost of uncompensated care.





Medicaid cuts will strain state budgets, potentially forcing cuts to eligibility and benefits, and increase uncompensated care costs for rural hospitals.
New enrollment barriers and shortened enrollment periods will disproportionately impact states with high ACA marketplace enrollment, many of which are in the Southeast.
The combination of federal policy changes and state-level challenges (such as low Medicaid reimbursement rates in states that didn't expand) is expected to worsen health outcomes and increase costs in the long run.
sunsporter1649 · 70-79, M
JSul3 · 70-79
@sunsporter1649 Deflection noted.

Where's Trump's Healthcare Plan?

Release the entire Epstein files and stop protecting pedophiles.
zonavar68 · 56-60, M
Trump only believes in health care if you pay for it, and if you buy drugs from drug companies he owns or has investments in.
BohoBabe · M
@GerOttman I'm already rich, so I'm good.
GerOttman · 70-79, M
@BohoBabe Cool! Lufthansa 8879 leaves Newark at 18:15 tomorrow for Zurich. Do you need a ride to the airport?
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