MSNBC Panelists Rage At Democrats For Getting ‘Nothing In Return’ After Shutting Government Down

MSNBC panelists criticized Democrats on Sunday for appearing to cave to President Donald Trump as they prepared to reopen the government without securing extensions for Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies.

Eight Democratic senators broke ranks with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer by supporting the Republican-led continuing resolution (CR) in a procedural vote. This CR would reopen and fund the government until January 30.

On “The Weekend: Primetime,” panelists expressed frustration that Democrats, despite shutting down the government for the longest period in U.S. history, are not receiving Obamacare subsidy extensions in return.

“For 40 days, you shut the government down and now you’re going to open the government up and what did you get in return? Nothing? Nothing?” MSNBC columnist Dean Obeidallah said. “After the pain you inflicted — people were willing to take the pain. I talked to union workers from TSA who said, ‘I’ll take the pain, it’s going to help me get health insurance subsidies paid.’ So you’re getting nothing in return. I don’t know how, and you just won an election on Tuesday, and you lose numbers.”

The panelists also found it unclear why several Democrats flipped their position after maintaining a firm stance over healthcare demands during the shutdown.

Democratic Virginia Senator Tim Kaine voted in favor of reopening the government just five days after the party’s significant victory in Virginia’s gubernatorial race.

The bipartisan compromise would reverse layoffs affecting 4,000 federal workers and schedule a vote on ACA subsidy extensions in December.

Co-host Antonia Hylton suggested that Trump ultimately emerged victorious, rendering the 40-day shutdown meaningless.

“In a way, it seems like the president is kind of getting what he wanted 40 days ago when all this started,” Hylton said. “He was out there saying that, ‘oh, this is all about Democrats trying to give health care to illegal immigrants.’ He just said that to reporters moments ago, repeating that refrain that Democrats had actually very successfully pushed back against.”

“There’s all this energy in the wake of Tuesday’s election. The president made remarks basically acknowledging he was on his back foot, saying Republicans are being harmed by all of this. And now, here he is, winning again?” she added.

Trump and Republicans have argued that Democrats supported the shutdown because they wanted to provide government-run healthcare to illegal immigrants. Data shows Medicaid spending for illegal immigrants nearly tripled under the Biden administration, coinciding with record-high illegal border crossings surpassing 2 million and 3 million encounters in a single fiscal year.

Additionally, the cost of Medicaid for illegal immigrants’ emergency care rose 142% in fiscal year 2024.

Obeidallah expressed confusion over Democratic senators’ decisions to cave. “I don’t understand how a Democratic senator goes, ‘Wow, we won really big. Let me cave now.’ That makes no sense to me.”

Notably, none of the Democrats who voted to reopen the government—including Illinois Senator Dick Durbin and New Hampshire Senator Jeanne Shaheen—are facing reelection in the 2026 midterms.
https://dailycaller.com/2025/11/10/msnbc-panelists-democrats-govt-down-obamacare/

When Government Competes, America Loses

In recent years, it has become an unfortunate bipartisan article of faith that the government — and not individuals, nor the businesses or institutions of civil society into which those individuals voluntarily assemble themselves — ought to operate to accomplish any good dreamt up by politicians and the pundit class.

But this fatal conceit, which seeks to subvert the competitive processes of the market and subordinate the will of the free American citizen to the bureaucrat’s, fails not only theoretically but empirically, because state action cannot compete with human action.

To document this, the Taxpayers Protection Alliance has inaugurated a series of policy briefs, chronicling the manifest and myriad failures of central planning and government-run economic endeavors. But first, in the words of Abraham Lincoln, it ought to be understood “where we are, and whither we are tending.”

The movement of Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) values ubiquitous and affordable medicine; so, its followers say, government ought to socialize the healthcare industry. Even so-called Abundance Democrats, in revolt against the stultifying excesses of the far left, betray a narrow view that associates economic development too closely with the deeds of the government, albeit a government freed of the worst strictures of such laws as the National Environmental Protection Act.

Republicans, too, have begun to echo the socialist senator from Vermont. Encapsulating this thinking, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent put it thus: “We believe home ownership is good, so therefore the government wants to be involved.” Proficiency in this language — that of progressives and socialists — has been gained by purported conservatives, who seem to have forgotten their mother tongue.

Indeed, although hardly a radical in temperament, Bessent makes explicit the radical premise from which many Republicans and nearly every Democrat now reason: I approve of X; the government must ensure that X occurs, perhaps even by effecting X directly.

Journeying from its source in principle to its destination in a policy proposal, any idea is refracted, colored, sometimes distorted, as it passes through myriad ideological lenses and filters. And, accordingly, the central planner’s premise, shared by the left and right, takes shape differently in the hands of each, touched by differing philosophical convictions and directed toward different ends.

Joe Biden fretted about carbon emissions and sought to make the composition of energy production, the construction of infrastructure, and even the technologies found in the cars Americans drive and the appliances in American homes a question to be decided by politicians and bureaucrats in Washington, D.C.—efforts which concluded in failure.

President Trump desires more domestic manufacturing; ergo, protectionism. He desires more high-tech, cutting-edge domestic manufacturing; ergo, the federal government acquired a 10-percent stake in Intel, becoming the company’s largest shareholder. He has been persuaded that organized labor is his friend; ergo, he conjured up a “golden share” in U.S. Steel, in no small part to enable his administration to protect the firm’s unionized employees.

In state capitals and city halls, similar assumptions obtain, and similar plans are propounded. For example, in the effort to make access to broadband internet ubiquitous, government-owned networks—which almost invariably founder—have been constructed in cities nationwide. Penetrating the national news cycle, Zohran Mamdani (New York City’s mayor-presumptive) advocated city-run grocery stores, opening their doors in competition with the private sector. No matter that such proposals have, in practice, proved themselves quixotic.

The ideologies of central planning rarely succeed even by the metrics of the planners themselves. So long as people remain people—both in their shortcomings as technocrats and in their independence and interest as entrepreneurs and workers—socialism and its softer, nicer, more palatable progeny will remain a scheme practicable only in Utopia, the land that never was and cannot be.

If men had the psychology and habits of the white ant, perhaps, things would be different; but, as Winston Churchill noted, “human nature is more intractable than ant-nature.” To their chagrin, politicians are left to contend with the world as it is, and with people as they are.

Russell Kirk once wrote: “Ignore the fact, and that fact will be your master.” Trumpian protectionism, single-payer medicine, or Mamdani’s petty socialism—none will succeed. No matter how powerful the force of the will or of the passions that propel them to completion, these projects cannot and, therefore, will not overcome the laws of economics, founded in human nature.

Finding failure, the central planners will run to and fro, searching vainly for some new policy remedy with which to save the patient, ignorant of the fact that the disease was, in the first place, brought on by an unnatural and imprudent course of treatment.

In the words of a popular online meme: “Reject modernity; embrace tradition.” Indeed, both left and right ought to reject the modern innovation of economies directed and micromanaged by the state and return to America’s heritage: liberty, property rights inviolable, and free markets.

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https://spectator.org/when-government-competes-america-loses/