Senate negotiations collapse after discussions on candidates for Trump Nukes candidates

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Hours of tense negotiations to conclude an agreement on the candidates of President Donald Trump exploded on Saturday evening, and now the legislators return home.
The Republicans of the Senate and the Democrats quickly pointed out to each other for the disappearance of the agreement, but it was finally Trump who disturbed the talks.
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President Donald Trump speaks to the media when he arrives at Glasgow Prestwick airport on July 25, 2025 in Prestwick, Scotland in Scotland (Images Andrew Harnik / Getty)
In a long article on his social media platform Truth Social, Trump accused the chief of the minorities of the Senate Chuck Schumer, Dn.y., of “demanding more than a billion dollars in order to approve a small number of our highly qualified candidates”.
“This request is obvious and unprecedented, and would be embarrassing for the Republican Party if it was accepted. It is political extortion, by any other name,” said Trump. “Tell Schumer, who undergoes enormous political pressure from his own party, the radical left the madmen, to go to hell!”
“Do not accept the offer,” he continued. “Go home and explain to your voters what bad democrats are, and what an excellent work the Republicans are doing, and have done for our country. Having excellent recreation and making America again great !!!”
Dems hollow, Trump demands everything: the nominated fight ends in the Senate while the GOP is looking for an agreement

The chief of the US Senate minorities, Chuck Schumer (D-NY), walks to speak at a press conference after the weekly lunch of the Senate democratic policy at the American Capitol on June 17, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images)
Instead of finding a route to vote up to 60 of the president’s candidates, all of them, who all moved the committee with bipartite support, the legislators voted for seven before leaving Washington until September.
But Schumer dealt with Trump’s decision as a victory for the Democrats of the Senate. He replied that it was the president who gave up negotiations while he and the head of majority in the Senate John Thune, Rs.d., worked to find a bipartite solution, “provided that the republicans of the White House and the Senate responded to our requests.”
“He took his ball, he returned home, leaving the Democrats and the Republicans wondering what happened,” said Schumer, next to a version of the size of a poster for the post of president.
“Trump all-caps said everything,” he said. “In a rage crisis, Trump threw in the towel, returned the Republicans to the house and could not do the basic work of negotiation.”
But before the president’s edict, the two sides of the aisle thought they were on the verge of a breakthrough to meet both Trump’s desire to see his confirmed candidates and leave Washington.
THUNE said there were “many offers” made between him and Schumer during the negotiations.
“There were several different moments when I think that one or the other or the two sides may have thought that there was an agreement at the end,” he said.
The Democrats of the Senate wanted the White House to start billions of funds from the National Institute of Health and Foreign Aid, in addition to a future agreement that no more claw packages would come from the White House.
In exchange, they would have Greenlight many of Trump’s unusual nominees.
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Washington, DC – July 1: (Publisher’s note: CROP alternative) Leader of the majority of the Senate John Thune (R -SD) stops while speaking to the journalists of the Senate after the Senate succeeded in the first bill of President Donald Trump in Washington, DC. (Photo of Andrew Harnik / Getty Images) (Getty Images / Andrwe Harnik)
Senator Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., Accused Schumer of going “too far” by increasing the price on his requests.
“We had three different offers since last night,” he said. “And whenever it happened, whenever it is” I want more “,” said Mullin about Schumer’s requests.
He said the Republicans were not caught by Trump’s call to arrest the talks and noted that the White House had been strongly involved in the negotiations.
“You realize that there was, it was never a question of concluding an agreement,” he continued. “They want to go out and say that the president is unrealistic, and because he cannot respond to his base to conclude an agreement as we have done in all the other presidents of history.”
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From now on, the Republicans will not continue the play meetings, but Mullin noted that the advance with a change of rule in the confirmation process when legislators return in September were going to occur in response.
“The requests have evolved on both sides a little over time,” said Thune. “But in the end, we never arrived at a place where we had both parties agree to lock it up.”
The Democrats of the Senate, on the other hand, replied that their offer had never changed and that the Republicans continued to increase the number of candidates they wanted through the line and tried to include more controversial partisan choices.
Schumer would not reveal the details of his requests, but accused changes in the Senate rules, a “huge error” and urged Trump to work with the Democrats of the Senate in the future, especially since the Congress rushing towards another deadline to finance the government in September.
“They should stop listening,” said Schumer. “If they want to do what is good for the American people, they should not be blind to Donald Trump.”



