Congress

10 Senators Crossed Party Lines On Shutdown Vote

Many of the Democrats who voted "yes" are up for re-election in red states. The Republicans who voted "no" each have their own reasons.

10 Senators Crossed Party Lines On Shutdown Vote
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Senate Republicans and Democrats, for the most part, stayed united in the vote to prevent a government shutdown. Five Republicans and five Democrats, however, strayed from party lines.

On the left, Sens. Doug Jones, Joe Donnelly, Claire McCaskill, Heidi Heitkamp and Joe Manchin voted with Republicans on the spending bill. That's likely because the lawmakers are up for re-election in red states, or because they represent Trump strongholds.

On the right, Sens. Mitch McConnell, Lindsey Graham, Jeff Flake, Rand Paul and Mike Lee voted "no." The Hill reports McConnell voted that way for the procedural right to bring up the bill later.

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Graham, Flake, Paul and Lee, however, are common GOP dissenters with different reasons for voting against the spending bill. The Washington Post notes Lee regularly votes against short-term spending bills, and Paul told Fox News on Friday the spending bill exceeds spending caps. 

Graham and Flake's "no" votes side more with Democrats, though. They cited the fact the bill doesn't include protections for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, recipients. The future of that program still isn't clear.

Early Saturday morning, Flake and Graham said Senate leadership promised to give a bipartisan legislative fix for DACA by Feb. 8. As part of the deal, the two Republicans and some Democrats may agree to re-open the government.

Senators told Politico that McConnell wouldn't agree to that demand, and House Speaker Paul Ryan said the Senate needed to fund the government until Feb. 16 first.