Johnson says Democrats are to blame for looming lapse in military pay
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House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) on Saturday cast blame on Democrats for a looming lapse in military pay as the shutdown impasse persists, pointing to seven failed votes in the Senate to pass his stopgap funding bill.

“HR 5371 (the Continuing Resolution) is the bill to pay our troops,” he wrote on social platform X. “No one in the military or any military family should have their pay blocked on October 15! Since the bill ALREADY PASSED THE HOUSE, a simple yes vote by five more Democrats on Tuesday would allow the military to be paid on Wednesday.”

The Speaker added, “Call your Democrat Senator and insist they stop hurting the families who already sacrifice so much!”

Johnson has faced a push from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle to recall lawmakers to Washington to vote on a standalone bill to ensure military workers receive their checks next week — even if the government does not reopen. Instead, he announced Friday that House votes would not take place until a funding bill is passed.

More than 1.3 million military personnel are at risk of missing out on a paycheck come Oct. 15 if the government remains shuttered. With their roles considered essential for national security purposes, many service members still have to work without pay.

Federal workers received a paycheck on Friday — but only for the period ending on Sept. 30, a day before funding lapsed.

Earlier Friday, the Louisiana Republican suggested that President Trump — who supported a standalone bill — is looking for options to pay military workers without congressional action. The president also told Navy sailors last Sunday that the did not have to worry about back pay.

“The executive branch, the president, is working on ways that he may have, as well, to ensure the troops are paid,” Johnson said at a press conference. 

He also told reporters that Democratic lawmakers are the “ones that are demonstrating over and over and over now eight times that they don’t want” the military to be paid. 

Senators departed Washington on Thursday following the last failed vote, guaranteeing that the shutdown will stretch into next week. Democrats have been largely unified in their demands for health care concessions making it a steep climb for the GOP to reach the 60-vote threshold needed for the bill to advance.

If passed, the CR would fund the government at Biden-era levels until Nov. 21.

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