Senator Jeanne Shaheen just threw the minority leader under the bus.

Senator Jeanne Shaheen revealed that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer knew the entire time about the plan for a few Democrats to capitulate to Republicans on the government shutdown.

Shaheen, one of the seven Democrats (and one independent) who dropped their demand for a guaranteed extension of Obamacare subsidies, spoke to Fox News’s Brian Kilmeade on Monday morning.

Aside from serving as further proof that the Democrats are failing to act as an opposition party in any meaningful way, Shaheen’s comments also reveal one of two possible scenarios. Either Schumer was scheming to end the shutdown behind the scenes, only pretending to be against it while pinning the blame on the eight people who aren’t up for reelection anytime soon, or he has no control over his party. Either way, it proves the need for Democrats to jettison the minority leader.

  • TempermentalAnomaly@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Senators up for re-election will remember if we do the following:

    1. If you have a dem senator, write to them and tell them that the leadership is out of touch with the demands of the moment
    2. If the blue incumbent in your state is retiring in 2026, run a progressive. Use this moment to draw real separation between the progressive and the establishment candidate. Make any contact between them and the democratic leadership toxic
    3. If the blue incumbent hasn’t condemned this and the democratic leadership, do the same as above.

    Democrats up for reelection in 2026

    • Colorado: John Hickenlooper
    • Delaware: Chris Coons
    • Georgia: Jon Ossoff
    • Illinois: Dick Durbin (Retiring)
    • Massachusetts: Ed Markey
    • Michigan: Gary Peters (Retiring)
    • Minnesota: Tina Smith (Retiring)
    • New Hampshire: Jeanne Shaheen (Retiring)
    • New Jersey: Cory Booker (Chair of Strategic Communications Committee)
    • New Mexico: Ben Ray Lujan
    • Oregon: Jeff Merkley
    • Rhode Island: Jack Reed
    • Virginia: Mark Warner

    Flipping the senate in 2026 seems unlikely, but transforming the democratic party must start now. Schumer is up for re-election in 2028, but he has to be removed from leadership now.