Instead you blame people for not doing things completely outside of their power, and you want others to blame them too so that they never have any power to fix this situation.
This bill is going through what is called “Reconciliation.” Because it’s a budget bill and the DNC have filibustered it, the GOP are using a simple majority to pass it back to the house to be voted on a second time after which the president can sign it into law.
Other examples of this in the past: The DNC almost used Reconciliation in 2010 to pass the ACA, but before that could happen they got independent Joe Leiberman to agree to concessions and pass it with a supermajority instead. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 used Reconciliation. The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 used Reconciliation.
I’m not finding that in the news anywhere.
thank you for the correction
More semantics really.
Thats because he did it sly. He never endorsed him, what you are seeing is PR for the aftermath. https://www.mediaite.com/politics/chuck-schumer-hails-impressive-campaign-from-zohran-mamdani-but-doesnt-endorse-or-congratulate-him/
The claim was he came out against Mamdani, though, where is the evidence of that?
So you’re happy with this lack of endorsement?
so you hate waffles?
My reply was in reference to their own reply here: https://infosec.pub/comment/16780580
I was not being serious.
No, but I won’t participate in divisive tribalistic bullshit which weakens the left.
Schumer is not on the left
And I’m not going to go out of my way to say people who are actively hurting the US are somehow good, regardless of their
tribeparty.Instead you blame people for not doing things completely outside of their power, and you want others to blame them too so that they never have any power to fix this situation.
Corey booker held a 24 chat session instead of holding up actual legislation. Filibustering works, Dems just dont want to.
This bill is going through what is called “Reconciliation.” Because it’s a budget bill and the DNC have filibustered it, the GOP are using a simple majority to pass it back to the house to be voted on a second time after which the president can sign it into law.
Other examples of this in the past: The DNC almost used Reconciliation in 2010 to pass the ACA, but before that could happen they got independent Joe Leiberman to agree to concessions and pass it with a supermajority instead. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 used Reconciliation. The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 used Reconciliation.