A day after Democrats swept a series of off-year elections on Tuesday, Democratic senators returned to the Capitol with a complicated choice: whether to use the election as renewed leverage and hold firm on the shutdown, or take a bipartisan deal that would reopen government but do little to actually address skyrocketing Obamacare premiums.
For now, different groups of Democrats seem to have different approaches.
For the moderate wing of the Senate’s Democratic Caucus, which has been working toward a deal with Republicans to end the shutdown, Tuesday’s decisive election results didn’t seem to do much.
Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich., told MSNBC on Wednesday that conversations about the shutdown will “continue until we resolve this.”
“It’s not going to stop,” Peters said.
Another member of that bipartisan group, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., said Wednesday that the talks remain “positive.”
And Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., told MSNBC that “as long as we’re talking and negotiating, still trying to move forward, that’s going to be helpful.”
But for the Democrats who were already frustrated with the deal that was emerging, the election results only stiffened their resolve. The voters, they said, had sent a message: Hold firm.
Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., told reporters on Wednesday that “It would be very strange if, on the heels of the American people having rewarded Democrats for standing up and fighting, we surrendered without getting anything for the people we were fighting for.”
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., echoed Murphy, saying the election results “should embolden us to know the American people are on our side,” adding that he hopes his colleagues read the results that same way.
Other Democrats cited Trump’s growing unease with the shutdown as a reason to hold firm.
“Donald Trump finally realizes that he’s got a problem on his hands,” Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., told reporters Wednesday. “He clearly saw it as a liability in the elections last night, so he should come to the table and help fix it.”
In a post on social media Tuesday night, as the votes were being counted, Trump listed the shutdown as one of “two reasons that Republicans lost elections.” (The other reason was that “TRUMP WASN’T ON THE BALLOT.”)
The next morning, the president told Senate Republicans at a White House breakfast meeting that the shutdown had been “worse for us than for them,” according to several senators in attendance, pressuring Republicans to nix the 60-vote filibuster. Ditching the filibuster would allow GOP lawmakers to open the government unilaterally without needing Democratic support.
Even before the election, public polling had routinely shown Democrats to be in the driver seat politically on the shutdown, with Americans routinely blaming Republicans more than Democrats for the standoff.









