• Schumer says he's staying put amid growing resignation pressure

    From Leroy N. Soetoro@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 24 00:56:24 2025
    XPost: alt.politics.democrats.senate, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics XPost: alt.society.liberalism, or.politics

    https://www.axios.com/2025/03/23/schumer-not-stepping-down-democratic-
    pressure

    Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said he's "not stepping down" from leadership in an interview aired Sunday amid mounting pressure from within
    his party to abandon his post.

    Why it matters: He's remaining defiant as Democratic lawmakers and outside groups pile on calls for him to step aside. But Schumer, who dealt a key
    blow to former President Biden's reelection bid, argued he's "absolutely"
    not making the same mistake Biden did when he hesitated to step down.

    "I did this out of conviction," Schumer said on NBC News' "Meet the
    Press," about his spending bill vote that angered some Democrats.
    He added his caucus has "all agreed to respect each other" over their
    differing opinions.

    Despite Schumer's public confidence, some House Democrats are urging their colleague Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) behind closed doors to challenge him for his Senate seat in 2028.

    Driving the news: Schumer acknowledged that the GOP-led funding bill that passed with support from some Senate Democrats was "certainly bad" but contended a government shutdown would be "15 or 20 times worse."

    He argued that a shutdown would give the Trump administration "sole power"
    to determine what is "essential," granting them latitude to further
    "eviscerate the federal government."

    Schumer further contended there would be no "off ramp" for a shutdown, and
    that only "those evil people at the top of the Executive Branch" could
    turn the lights back on.

    What he's saying: "It was a vote of principle," Schumer said.

    "Sometimes when you're a leader, you have to do things to avoid a real
    danger that might come down the curve," he continued. "And I did it out of
    pure conviction as to what a leader should do and what the right thing for America and my party was. People disagree."

    The other side: People do disagree, with many House Democrats viewing
    Schumer's vote as a show of weakness rather than of resolute leadership.

    Progressive "Squad" Reps. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) and Ocasio-Cortez added
    their fuel to the House fire Thursday, with Omar characterizing the Senate support for the GOP bill as giving up "our first point of leverage" at a
    town hall.

    Ocasio-Cortez called for "a Democratic Party that fights harder for us" at
    a rally alongside Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) in Nevada.

    While neither directly called for Schumer's resignation, other House Dems
    have openly backed a changing of the Democratic guard.

    Zoom in: Sanders, in an interview aired Sunday on ABC's "This Week," said
    the bill's passage "should not have happened, period."

    He noted that "Schumer is the leader of the party" — but the "bottom
    line," he said, is a broader issue beyond the Senate minority leader.
    "It's not just Chuck Schumer," he said, taking aim at "a Democratic party
    ... dominated by billionaires" that is out of touch with the issues of
    everyday Americans.

    Asked about Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi's (D-Calif.) dig that she doesn't "give away anything for nothing" — something she believed "happened the
    other day" — Schumer told NBC's Kristen Welker, "what we got ... is
    avoiding the horror of a shutdown."

    If Democrats had "asked for things," he said, Republicans "just would've
    said no."

    The big picture: The Democratic leader is steadfast in his self-defense.
    But the battle is bigger than him.

    The growing Schumer scorn underlines the party's urgent divide over how to handle President Trump's (at times legally dubious) executive steamroller. Schumer agreed Sunday that the U.S. is in a constitutional crisis in the
    early days of Trump 2.0.

    "Democracy is at risk," he said, later adding, "Now, we have to fight that
    back in every single way."

    Go deeper: Resistance backlash upends Chuck Schumer's book tour


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