For the first time since the shutdown began, senators this week began expressing some optimism that a solution might be right around the corner.
That optimism, however, will have to wait until next week, when food benefits have officially run out and Americans see their Obamacare premiums spike.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., sent lawmakers home on Thursday after Republicans and Democrats failed to reach an agreement on the shutdown for the fifth consecutive week.
Still, senators told MSNBC on Thursday that bipartisan talks are happening and that, despite Thune not seeing enough progress to keep the chamber in session over the weekend — or even on Friday — there is finally some progress.
One GOP senator, who requested anonymity to discuss the sensitive deliberations, said some of the talks are focused on appropriations, while others are centered on health care premiums. But mostly, this senator said, discussions are concentrated on turning the lights back on in Washington.
“I actually am seeing some movement, or seeing more discussions,” another GOP senator, Kevin Cramer of North Dakota, said Thursday.
Sen. Jon Ossoff, D-Ga., echoed that sentiment, telling MSNBC he thought “the pace of bipartisan discussions is a good sign.”
Whether those discussions are close to bearing fruit is another question.
Democrats are still demanding that lawmakers address the expiring Obamacare tax credits as part of any deal to end the shutdown, while Republicans insist the only way to end the impasse is by passing the short-term spending bill that the House approved last month.
Despite the ramped-up conversations, that core disagreement still exists.
“There is talking going on,” Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, said. “But we need talks to yield results, right?”
That lack of results seemed to prompt Thune to send everyone home.
It’s really reached the point of absurdity. It’s reached the point of real suffering for people.”
Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo.
“We got to see something from the Democrats that suggests that would be a worthwhile endeavor,” Thune said Wednesday when asked if he would keep lawmakers in over the weekend. Asked if at least 10 Democrats have come to him saying they are ready to have a serious conversation about ending the shutdown, he responded: “No.”
Less than 24 hours later, he adjourned the Senate for the week.
The discussions between Democrats and Republicans haven’t exactly been leadership-sanctioned. And Democratic and GOP leaders haven’t been the ones engaging in talks. Thune maintains there’s nothing to discuss until Democrats vote for the House-passed continuing resolution. And Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., maintains that Democrats will need real concessions on Obamacare before his caucus votes for a spending bill.
The dynamic is similar in the House with Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., who says it’s well past time to negotiate, and Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., who says there’s nothing to negotiate and has kept the House out of session since Sept. 19 to back up his claim.
With leaders sticking to their positions, when the impasse finally breaks is anyone’s guess.
The shutdown is on track to make history. If it stretches into Wednesday — day 36 — it will be the longest funding lapse in history, surpassing the 35-day shutdown of 2018-19 during President Donald Trump’s first term, which centered on Trump’s demand for border wall funding and was only a partial shutdown.
But several senators say next week could be different, particularly as the effect of the shutdown gets uglier.









