Collins failed to protect Mainers’ health care. She took a victory lap anyway.
Collins is considered the most vulnerable Senate Republican facing reelection next year.
Maine Sen. Susan Collins touted her role in ending the government shutdown, even though the final bill did not include any of her legislative priorities.
Collins leads the Appropriations Committee that crafted the continuing resolution (CR) to reopen the government. She claims to support extending Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) subsidies and reining in President Donald Trump’s spending cuts, but the CR did not include these provisions, and Collins did not join with Democrats who were pushing to add them.
“I was responsible for not only putting the bill together, but also managing it on the Senate floor,” Collins said in a Nov. 18 radio interview. “Dealing with proposals to change it, negotiating not only with my colleagues on both sides of the aisle, but also with the House of Representatives and the administration.”
The 43-day shutdown was the longest in American history. It began on Oct. 1 when Democrats in Congress refused to back any funding bill that did not meet an array of demands, including the extension of Obamacare subsidies that help 65,000 Mainers afford health care.
Democrats also demanded the Trump administration be blocked from withholding any funding that was already approved by Congress. Since January, the White House has rescinded billions in appropriated funds, including $323,000 to study rural health care access in Maine.
Democratic Rep. Rosa DeLauro told NOTUS that there was a bipartisan proposal to block future rescissions and that she personally lobbied Collins and others on the Appropriations Committee to include it in the CR. The proposal never saw the light of day.
The CR did, however, include a provision that would have allowed Senate Republicans to sue the Justice Department for $500,000 if their phone records were seized during the investigation of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. Roll Call reported that Collins personally added the provision at the behest of South Dakota Sen. John Thune.
A bipartisan vote in the House stripped the provision from the final CR.
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