Trump, Musk Reject Johnson’s Plan to Avert Shutdown

Speakership in Peril as Potential Holiday Shutdown Nears
Donald Trump
Trump is trashing Johnson's plan just days after sitting with him at the Army-Navy football game outside Washington. (Hannah Beier/Bloomberg News)

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With a month to go before he returns to the White House, Donald Trump is shaking up Washington again, trashing House Speaker Mike Johnson’s plan for a deal to avoid a government shutdown before the holidays.

Backroom spending discussions on Capitol Hill spilled out into an open clash on X Dec. 18, with Elon Musk, the social media platform’s owner, denouncing the compromise Johnson had worked out to keep funding going into next year.

The drama left Johnson, just days after sitting with the president-elect at the Army-Navy football game outside Washington, huddling with allies in his Capitol office to come up with a Plan B that would keep the government financed and avoid the political pain of a shutdown when the current deadline runs out Dec. 20.



Johnson told Fox News earlier in the day that he had discussed the package with Musk and fellow Trump ally Vivek Ramaswamy on a text chain, indicating that none of them liked the spending in the measure. Johnson said he tried to relay the reality of the situation: He needed Democratic votes.

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Mike Johnson

The drama left Johnson huddling with allies in his Capitol office to come up with a Plan B. (Al Drago/Bloomberg News)

But Musk throughout the day fired off a barrage of posts on X calling for a shutdown if Republicans couldn’t strike a deal more to his liking.

Trump and Vice President-elect J.D. Vance delivered the final blow late in the afternoon with a joint post assailing the proposal and calling for a new approach that would bring in the fraught issue of raising the debt ceiling. Soon after, Trump threatened to actively oppose the re-election of any Republicans who supported the legislation.

The debt ceiling had been an issue legislators didn’t expect to have to confront until next year, and certainly wasn’t on their pre-holiday agenda.

Vance spent about an hour in Johnson’s office on Wednesday night. “We had a productive conversation,” he told reporters. “I think we’ll solve some problems here.”

Johnson later left the Capitol without answering questions.

Republicans representing states and districts set to benefit from disaster relief — such has hard-hit western North Carolina — began demanding that it not fall by the wayside.

“I’ll use every tool available to block a CR that fails Western North Carolina communities in need of long-term certainty,” Senator Thom Tillis, who is up for re-election in 2026 in the toss-up state, said on X, referring to the measure, known as a continuing resolution.

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Elon Musk

Musk, a formidable power in the Republican Party through his vast wealth and control of X, took a victory lap Dec. 18 as Johnson’s deal teetered. (Al Drago/Bloomberg News)

The spending vote this week had been expected to be relatively free of drama, as neither the incoming unified Republican majority nor the Democrats currently in control of the Senate and White House wanted a showdown as the holidays loomed. But the bill includes more than $100 billion in disaster aid and has other sweeteners, such as a pay raise for lawmakers, drawing the ire of Musk, who Trump has named to lead a newly created Department of Government Efficiency to bring major expenditure cuts.

Now, both funding the government and Johnson’s speakership — which he’s only held since October 2023 — hangs in the balance.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre, in a statement on Dec. 18, said “triggering a damaging government shutdown would hurt families who are gathering to meet with their loved ones and endanger the basic services Americans from veterans to Social Security recipients rely on.”

“A deal is a deal. Republicans should keep their word,” she added.

Trump’s latest gambit comes almost six years to the day after his demand for funding for a border wall on another December temporary spending bill led to the longest government shutdown in American history — 35 days. Trump ultimately agreed to reopen the government without getting money for the wall.

The new Congress convenes on Jan. 3 and must elect a speaker. The vote requires a majority of the members who vote. Johnson can spare very few Republican votes if he wants to hold onto his job.

“Look, I like Mike. He’s a great, Christian guy,” Ralph Norman of South Carolina, a House Freedom Caucus member, said on Bloomberg Television’s “Balance of Power.” “What’s happened has not helped his chances.”

Norman, however, acknowledged that a day in politics is a lifetime, and the speaker vote is still more than two weeks away.

“We will see when Jan. 3 comes along and see what happens,” he added.

In the meantime, Musk, a formidable power in the Republican Party through his vast wealth and control of X, took a victory lap Dec. 18 as Johnson’s deal teetered.

“The voice of the people was heard. This was a good day for America,” he said on X.

Billy House, Steven T. Dennis and Gregory Korte contributed to this report.

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