Centrist Democrats are looking for a way out of the government shutdown, trying to find a negotiating partner on the GOP side. So far, Republicans want no part of it.
On Monday, Rep. Brad Schneider, D-Ill. — the chairman of the center-left New Democrat Coalition — fired off letters to two centrist Republican groups: the Republican Governance Group and the Main Street Caucus. Schneider asked the chairmen of both factions — Reps. David Valadao, R-Calif., and Mike Flood, R-Neb., respectively — to convene a bipartisan cohort to discuss the funding lapse and the looming expiration of Obamacare tax credits.
“This is not about assigning blame or rehashing past disagreements,” Schneider wrote in nearly identical letters to Valadao and Flood that were obtained by MSNBC. “It is about listening to one another and working toward reopening the government and avoiding increases in healthcare premiums in a way that reflects our mutual commitment to those we represent.”
But those requests were quickly rejected, with Valadao and Flood both restating the standard GOP position — that they are open to discussing health care once the government is reopened. That has been the firm position of message Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and his leadership team even before the shutdown began.
“Americans are struggling, and I agree that we must work together to pass meaningful policy solutions that help lower the cost of healthcare, including enhanced premium tax credits expiring at the end of this year,” Valadao wrote in a letter to Schneider that was sent on Tuesday and first reported by NOTUS. “However, holding the American government hostage and withholding pay from hardworking federal employees is not the way to accomplish that goal.”
Flood struck a similar note, telling Schneider he would like to sit down to discuss how to improve life for their constituents “once the government re-opens.”
“The members of the Main Street Caucus, by and large, always vote to fund the government regardless of who occupies the White House,” Flood wrote in his own letter to Schneider on Tuesday. “We don’t believe in leveraging the paychecks of federal employees to achieve a political outcome.”
The back-and-forth underscores two emerging themes in the shutdown showdown. On the left, Democrats are looking for a negotiating partner as the effects of the shutdown grow more acute. And on the right, Republicans — even more moderate Republicans — are standing firm that they won’t negotiate until the lights are turned back on.
Schneider made his entreaties as concerns over the effect of the shutdown mount on both sides of the aisle, with food benefits set to run out; the pot of money for low-income pregnant women, infants and children (WIC) running dry; and federal workers on track to miss another paycheck.
But unlike previous shutdowns, those pressure points have failed to nudge either party toward compromise. In fact, the pressure points seem to be doing the opposite, prompting Democrats and Republicans to dig in.









