Chuck SchumerCongressContinuing resolutionDonald TrumpFeaturedGovernment ShutdownHakeem JeffriesJohn ThuneMike JohnsonWashington D.C.White House

Trump and congressional leaders to meet before government shutdown

President Donald Trump will meet with Democratic and Republican congressional leaders on Monday, the Washington Examiner confirmed, ahead of a looming government shutdown on Oct. 1.

Trump will meet with House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA), House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD), and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), per a White House official. Negotiations between the parties have been at a standstill as Republicans argue they have done their job and rallied behind a “clean” short-term spending deal, which punts the funding deadline to Nov. 21.

But Democrats are demanding concessions from the GOP to help alleviate what they call a healthcare “crisis” stemming from reforms to Medicaid made in the “big, beautiful bill” signed into law in July.

Jeffries and Schumer confirmed the meeting in a statement Saturday night.

“President Trump has once again agreed to a meeting in the Oval Office. As we have repeatedly said, Democrats will meet anywhere, at any time, and with anyone to negotiate a bipartisan spending agreement that meets the needs of the American people. We are resolute in our determination to avoid a government shutdown and address the Republican healthcare crisis. Time is running out.”

Trump was scheduled to meet with Jeffries and Schumer on Thursday, but he canceled the meeting after reviewing the “unserious and ridiculous” demands from congressional Democrats. The president determined that no meeting could “possibly be productive,” drawing severe rebuke from Jeffries and Schumer, who ridiculed him for “chicken[ing] out” and “running away” from the negotiating table.

Both parties are already pointing fingers at each other for who will be to blame if Congress cannot pass a continuing resolution by Sept. 30. If there is a shutdown, federal workers will not be paid, and federal buildings will close as Congress works to pass a deal to reopen the shuttered government. During a shutdown, other bills can be brought up for a vote, but all energy would likely be focused on bringing a CR to the floor.

Republicans have begun their blame game against Democrats and are accusing them of wanting to shut down the government to provide healthcare for illegal immigrants. This was a Democratic messaging point during the One Big Beautiful Bill negotiations, where the GOP reforms to Medicaid installed work requirements to remove illegal immigrants from the payroll.

But historically, voters have blamed the party in power for a government shutdown. With a GOP trifecta, Republicans are put in the crosshairs, particularly ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, where their voting record and agenda successes will be tested.

Democrats have made no moves to concede, with Jeffries traveling back to Washington, D.C., to give press conferences three days in a row last week to nail down messaging that the party will work with “anyone, anytime, any place” to prevent a shutdown.

Jeffries has leaned heavily on Johnson’s decision to send the House home and cancel votes on Sept. 29 and 30, effectively putting the ball in the Senate’s court to pass the current CR or make changes quickly enough to bring House lawmakers back to the district for a vote.

DEMOCRATS AND TRUMP DIG IN ON SHUTDOWN DEMANDS

The most recent and longest government shutdown in U.S. history occurred during Trump’s first term. It lasted 35 days and went from the end of 2018 to the beginning of 2019, during which time the president failed to get any additional money to construct more of the U.S.-Mexico border wall.

The spending deal, a seven-week CR until Nov. 21, would allow appropriators to go to conference on a three-bill minibus and attempt to pass the remaining nine appropriations bills for fiscal 2026.

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