House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries went on CNBC this week to make a case for why Democrats arenât to blame for the government shutdown â and ended up doing the political version of slowly backing into a corner while someone politely explains how logic works.
The interview, if you can call it that, quickly turned into a very public unraveling of Jeffriesâ talking points. And the best part? It wasnât even a conservative grilling him. It was CNBCâs Joe Kernen â not exactly a fire-breathing partisan â calmly walking through the reality of the situation while Jeffries tried to make the case that up is down, black is white, and the shutdown is somehow the GOPâs fault for doing what voters elected them to do.
Letâs set the scene.
Jeffries shows up with the usual Democratic toolkit: moral outrage, vague appeals to âbipartisanship,â and a few prepackaged lines about how Republicans are just mean. But then Kernen, channeling what a lot of Americans are starting to wonder, hits him with a little reality:
âThere was an election,â Kernen says. âRepublicans were put in a position to pass the Big Beautiful Bill⌠now Democrats donât like it, so youâre shutting the government down until Republicans undo what was lawfully passed?â
Cue the awkward silence.
Jeffries looked like heâd just been told the punchline before he finished setting up the joke. Because hereâs the thing â you can almost hear the internal panic clock ticking when Kernen flips the scenario. If Republicans had thrown a fit over the Inflation Reduction Act or some bloated Biden stimulus package â and threatened to keep troops unpaid and services frozen until Democrats gave in â the media would be running a 24/7 meltdown special titled âEnd of Democracy: Day 7.â
But since itâs Democrats trying to undo duly-passed legislation with a legislative hostage crisis, weâre supposed to call it âstanding strong.â
Sure.
Then it gets better â or worse, depending on how much secondhand embarrassment you can stomach. Jeffries tries to pivot, accuses Republicans of refusing to negotiate, and insists they are the ones keeping the government closed.
Kernen, practically blinking in disbelief, interrupts: âHow could they do that?â
Jeffries, increasingly flustered, tosses out a vague word salad about cruelty, bipartisanship, and a health care crisis (because of course). But notice what he doesnât say: He doesnât deny that Democrats are refusing to budge unless Republicans agree to strip out all the provisions they passed in the House.
In other words, the ânegotiationâ Democrats are demanding goes something like this: âGive us everything we want. And then weâll talk.â
Thatâs not compromise. Thatâs extortion with a side of moral lecturing.
And hereâs whatâs really infuriating: Jeffries and his allies are still drawing paychecks. While military families are sweating over missed income and small business contractors are burning through savings to stay afloat, the folks in the Capitol keep cashing in â and grandstanding on TV.
The shutdown isnât some tragic accident or bureaucratic fluke. Itâs a calculated maneuver to nullify Republican wins with political blackmail. And the best defense Democrats can muster is to go on cable news, get calmly dismantled by a CNBC host, and then cry âcruelty!â
Thereâs a reason public trust in Congress is in the basement â and if this is the strategy Democrats are going with, they better hope voters arenât watching these interviews.
Because when even CNBC is poking holes in your narrative, the spin cycleâs officially broken.
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