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House GOP Drops Midterm Government Funding Bomb Democrats Cannot Ignore

House GOP Drops Midterm Government Funding Bomb Democrats Cannot Ignore

House GOP Drops Midterm Government Funding Bomb Democrats Cannot Ignore

Published: July 18, 2026 | TrenBuzz.com


Key PointsGOP Drops Midterm Government Funding Bomb


Speaker Mike Johnson just played the most calculated political card of the 2026 midterm season, and every American will feel it before November.

House GOP leaders released text Friday for a bill to fund the vast majority of the federal government from the start of the next fiscal year on October 1 until after the midterm elections, bypassing the bipartisan appropriations process and daring Democrats to pick a shutdown fight months before voters head to the polls.

Why House GOP Midterm Government Funding Strategy Is Pure Political Warfare

The current plan is to vote on a bill, known as a continuing resolution, or CR, that would extend current government funding levels through the November election, House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters Thursday.

The move is a deliberate political trap. Republicans are increasingly worried about spending the final month of the midterm campaign defending a government shutdown. House Republicans have little confidence Democrats will provide the votes needed to pass a funding extension. The planned July vote is designed to put both Democrats and the Senate on notice that Republicans do not believe they can count on bipartisan support for a continuing resolution.

Johnson sweetened the deal for conservatives in a way that makes Democratic opposition even harder to spin. As a sweetener, Johnson and his leadership team rolled the SAVE America Act into the funding resolution, a bill requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote in federal elections and photo ID to cast a ballot.

Now Democrats face an impossible choice. Vote yes and hand Republicans a voter ID win, or vote no and own a government shutdown six weeks before Election Day.

Republican leaders believe a fall spending dispute could place greater public attention on Democratic opposition to GOP-backed election requirements immediately before voters decide control of Congress.

What nobody is saying plainly enough is the scale of failure this bill is covering up. To date the House has passed just three of the 12 appropriations bills for fiscal year 2027. A government that could not do its basic budget homework is now asking voters to reward it in November.

House Republicans also unveiled a $95 billion legislative plan focused on boosting defense, aiding farmers and enacting stricter voter registration rules, a sequel to the massive tax and spending cut bill that President Donald Trump signed into law last year.

The midterm clock is ticking. Johnson is betting that Democrats blink first. And if they do not, Republicans will spend October pointing at them every single day.

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