Moment of truth for Democrats as shutdown coalition frays

By Jordain Carney, Nicholas Wu, Calen Razor | 10/28/2025 06:25 AM EDT

A major federal employee union broke ranks and forced some Democrats into a defensive crouch.

Dick Durbin speaks.

The American Federation of Government Employees' turnabout "has a lot of impact," Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) said. Francis Chung/POLITICO

Democrats grappled Monday with the first major fraying of their coalition amid the government shutdown, with a federal employee union calling for them to stand down four weeks into the standoff.

There was no immediate surrender from party leaders, but the union’s plea forced many Democratic lawmakers into a defensive crouch. Their No. 2 Senate leader said it would be a subject of internal conversations this week with bipartisan talks all but ground to a halt.

“It has a lot of impact. They’ve been our friends,” Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) told reporters Monday, adding that Democrats “take them seriously.”

Advertisement

The push by the American Federation of Government Employees for Congress to immediately pass a “clean” stopgap funding bill, which is what has been offered by Republicans, is among a laundry list of pressure points that are bearing down on lawmakers.

GET FULL ACCESS