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Today: March 14, 2025

Democrats channel their outrage over DOGE, Ukraine and more in marathon Senate session

Congress Budget Democrats
February 21, 2025

WASHINGTON (AP) โ€” The budget resolution from Republicans was on the agenda in the Senate, but the late-night debate encompassed so much more.

Democrats used the overnight session that ended early Friday morning as a platform for their outrage over what President Donald Trump has wrought during his first month in office and their warnings of what is still to come.

From Trump adviser Elon Muskโ€™s Department of Government Efficiency slicing through the federal workforce to Trumpโ€™s attacks on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to the GOP plan to extend tax breaks including for the wealthy and cut safety net programs, far more than the $340 billion budget framework on border security and deportations came under scrutiny.

Democrats channel their outrage over DOGE, Ukraine and more in marathon Senate session
Congress Budget Democrats

Out of power in Washington, D.C., the Democrats instead brought to the Senate floor pages of amendments, keeping the chamber long into Thursday night and early Friday morning.

โ€œPeople donโ€™t send us here to make their lives worse. But thatโ€™s exactly what Trump and Musk are doing,โ€ said Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., launching the debate. โ€œThey are looking at our most pressing problems โ€” and making them so much worse. And this budget proposal will only add fuel to the fire."

Sen. Jeff Merkley of Oregon, the top Democrat on the Budget Committee, test-drove a new term โ€” โ€œTrumpflationโ€ โ€” and asked what in the presidentโ€™s โ€œbig, beautiful, billโ€ would help Americans.

โ€œTake this plan and put it in the โ€˜woodchipper,โ€™โ€ Merkley said, repurposing Muskโ€™s quip about chopping up the federal government. โ€œThereโ€™s nothing โ€˜beautifulโ€™ about destroying programs families depend on."

Democrats channel their outrage over DOGE, Ukraine and more in marathon Senate session
Congress Budget Democrats

As the โ€œvote-a-ramaโ€ dragged into the wee hours Democrats proposed amendments to bar tax breaks for billionaires and millionaires, reverse DOGE firings of public workers and program cuts to government services, preserve Medicaid, help Ukraine and on and on.

Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado offered an amendment to reinstate the fired federal employees at the Forest Service, National Park Service and other public lands agencies.

Sen. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., sought to prevent reductions in government programs fighting avian flu at a time of soaring prices of eggs.

Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island and Sen. Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire wanted to ensure the U.S. commits to supporting Ukraine in the fight against Russia.

Democrats channel their outrage over DOGE, Ukraine and more in marathon Senate session
Trump Congress

But none of them were being approved.

Still, Democrats preferred talking about almost anything but Trump's plans for deporting immigrants and beefing up border security, the main provisions of the $340 billion budget framework, which also includes funding for the Pentagon and Coast Guard.

Those immigration-related issues divide the Democrats, who struggled during the fall election to counter Trump's deportation plans and still have not formed a ready response.

Republicans happily pointed out the disconnect as they marched their budget framework to passage. It was approved, 52-48, on a mostly party-line vote, a key step in the budget process. One Republican, Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, opposed it, as did all Democrats.

Democrats channel their outrage over DOGE, Ukraine and more in marathon Senate session
Congress Budget

The package now must sync up with one from the House, where Speaker Mike Johnson is working up Trump's โ€œbig, beautiful billโ€ with some $4.5 trillion in tax breaks and up to $2 trillion in spending cuts.

Nearing daybreak, when Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., offered an amendment to prevent โ€œunvetted and unaccountableโ€ DOGE workers to access Americans' private information in government databases, Republicans brought it down on a voice vote, with a thundering no.

After the various prohibitions on billionaire tax breaks didn't pass, Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts tried to block breaks for those earning $10 million. It was turned back. Sen. Mark Kelly of Arizona suggested the cap be set at $100 million. It failed. Sen. Angus King of Maine tried $500 million. Nope.

GOP Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana assessed the whole evening as comparable to โ€œprofessional wrestingโ€ and chided Democrats for drifting off topic. He said the bill was about border security not the tax cuts, which would be addressed later.

Democrats channel their outrage over DOGE, Ukraine and more in marathon Senate session
Senate Education

At the start of the evening, Sen. Bernie Sanders, a former chairman of the Budget committee, spent some time discussing his own ideas, including his plan to expand Social Security benefits and extend Medicare health care coverage to provide seniors with access to dental, vision and hearing aid benefits.

The Vermont senator said it's unacceptable that millions of seniors can't afford eyeglasses, hearing aids or dentures.

โ€œThat should not be happening in the United States of America in the year 2025," Sanders said.

Then he zeroed in on Trump's remarkable suggestion it was Ukraine that started the war, rather than Russian President Vladimir Putin's invasion of the country in 2022.

Democrats channel their outrage over DOGE, Ukraine and more in marathon Senate session
Trump Cabinet Gabbard

โ€œReally?โ€ an incredulous Sanders asked, urging fellow senators to speak out. โ€œThat is, as I hope every member of the Senate knows, an absolute lie.โ€

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