Schumer Slammed After Making Guilty Confession On Senate Floor

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D–NY) is facing bipartisan backlash after he declared that the ongoing federal government shutdown is “getting better for us every day,” prompting sharp condemnation from the White House and Republican lawmakers.
The controversy erupted Thursday after Punchbowl News reported that Schumer told colleagues the prolonged shutdown—now entering its second week—was politically beneficial for Democrats. The shutdown began after negotiations collapsed over Democrats’ push to restore health care funding for undocumented immigrants, a measure Republicans have rejected as “reckless and unfair to taxpayers.”
“Every day gets better for us,” Schumer said, according to Punchbowl News. “It’s because we’ve thought about this long in advance, and we knew that health care would be the focal point on Sept. 30, and we prepared for it… Their whole theory was — threaten us, bamboozle us, and we would submit in a day or two.”
The remark was followed hours later by a heated exchange on the Senate floor. Schumer accused House Speaker Mike Johnson (R–LA) of “killing his own constituents” by refusing to reopen the government on Democratic terms.
“Hear that, Mr. Speaker?” Schumer shouted. “Good Americans in your own state… will die. All because the Speaker chose to keep the House on vacation rather than negotiate with Democrats and end their Trump shutdown. Shameful.”
🚨 BREAKING: Chuck Schumer LOSES IT on the Senate floor, accuses Speaker Johnson of KILLING his own Louisiana residents by not caving to Democrats on healthcare
— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) October 9, 2025
Holy crap, this is disgusting.
"Hear that, Mr. Speaker?! Good Americans in your own state…will DIE. All because the… pic.twitter.com/5U72fg9YsQ
Republicans immediately denounced Schumer’s comments as inflammatory and cruel, while the White House — led by President Donald Trump — called the remarks “disgusting and revealing.”
“Chuck Schumer just said the quiet part out loud: Democrats are gleefully inflicting pain on the American people over their push to give illegal aliens free health care,” said White House deputy press secretary Abigail Jackson.
“Workers are missing paychecks; travelers are missing flights; businesses are struggling; military families are forced to rely on food pantries. But to Chuck Schumer, that means ‘every day gets better.’ No matter what he thinks, Americans struggling is not good — and Democrats must stop inflicting this pain on them and reopen the government now,” Jackson said.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt echoed that sentiment in a post on X, writing: “While federal workers stress over missed paychecks, military families turn to food pantries, and airports around the country face delays — Chuck Schumer and the Democrats are bragging that ‘every day gets better’ for them. What a disgusting and revealing statement.”
The standoff has now entered its tenth day, leaving hundreds of thousands of federal workers without pay and halting nonessential government services. Economic analysts estimate that the shutdown is costing the U.S. economy up to $2 billion per week in lost productivity and delayed federal contracts.
During a Cabinet meeting Thursday, President Donald Trump accused Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D–NY) of “holding the entire federal government hostage.”
“So Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries and the Congressional Democrats are holding the government hostage,” Trump said. “They’re doing it because they want free healthcare for illegal immigrants, and because Chuck’s afraid Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is going to run against him. He’s terrified of his own party.”
Trump went on to predict that Schumer would “retire soon,” citing declining polling numbers and growing frustration from moderate Democrats.
Meanwhile, internal party tensions are intensifying for Schumer. In New York, the communist candidate Zohran Mamdani has taken an early lead in the city’s mayoral race, while speculation continues that Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–NY) could challenge Schumer for his Senate seat in 2026 — though she has not announced a campaign.
For now, there is no end in sight to the shutdown or to the political escalation surrounding it. Congressional leaders are expected to reconvene negotiations Friday, though both sides remain far apart on spending priorities — and increasingly bitter about who’s taking the blame.