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Senate Republican leaders hoped December would deliver a clean exit into Christmas. They planned to move a set of five spending bills through the chamber and call it responsible governance. They produced the opposite. The minibus they advertised turned out to be a megabus packed with pork, favors, and quiet policy surprises. Conservatives blocked it because the bill exposed every bad habit the Senate refuses to break.
I know. Boring, right? White liberal women are in crisis over a color trend and Travis Kelce’s butterfingers while D.C. stages its own slow-motion collapse. Things are happening, or not happening, depending on how generous you feel.
Senate Republican leaders are hoping that President Trump will intervene to quell a conservative rebellion in the upper chamber against a package of spending bills that Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) is trying to advance before Christmas.
Conservative Sens. Mike Lee (R-Utah), Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) and Rick Scott (R-Fla.) have brought a package of five appropriations bills — the so-called mini-bus — to a standstill because they object to the dozens of earmarks in the bill, a controversial practice that has divided Republicans for years. – The Hill
Lee, Johnson, and Scott did not block the package for sport. They blocked it because they opened the bill and found exactly what Republican leadership hoped no one would notice. The earmarks were everywhere. The party still claims to have a no earmarks rule, yet many senators ignore it the moment a donor clears their throat. Lee flagged a five-hundred-thousand-dollar earmark for a center that serves illegal immigrants. He also pointed to a three-million-dollar payout for a left-wing activist group in New York. Those items were not outliers. The package hid plenty more. Leadership expected a quick vote. They got a rebellion instead.
Who are these mysterious, unnamed Republican senators who are “fuming” over Republican objections to $5 billion in earmarks, many of which fund radical, left-wing causes?
I wish they were mad about that
Instead, they’re “fuming” that not all Republicans are on board pic.twitter.com/9VZ33WkFrx
— Mike Lee (@BasedMikeLee) December 8, 2025
Critics love to sneer at anyone who calls out GOP spending habits. They fall real quiet when the Senate proves those warnings right.
Leadership keeps insisting the bills must pass, though no one bothers to explain why the process needs to move at breakneck speed. A shutdown sits in the distance, yet the only real urgency comes from a desire to slip this thing through while Americans are busy preparing for the holidays. Political leverage means more to them than trust. They never question their own spending. When conservatives refuse to bless a bill full of favors, leadership acts blindsided. They like the look of discipline. They seldom practice it.
Thune asked Trump to step in because leadership cannot control its own members. It shows how weak they have become. The Hill never named who asked for help. I notice things like that, too. They want Trump to fix a problem they caused by ignoring their own rules.
Trump might not be available. He came home from Rome with a made-for-him FIFA award and went straight to the Kennedy Center to collect photos with KISS. The whole week looked like a souvenir tour. Senate leaders want Trump to intervene. He seems far more interested in enjoying his last term than babysitting the Senate. And MAGA feels a little dazzled at the moment. The bright lights and glamour win out over the math.
Republican voters see this show and barely blink. They’ve been lectured about restraint while watching senators wave bloated bills through like it’s nothing. The minute someone tries to slow it down, leadership pretends the objection is the crisis. Voters have lived through this same loop for so long that it feels like reruns.
The Senate might still shove this package through. Maybe Trump will look up from what looks more like a nostalgia tour long enough to notice. Leadership will call it a win and hope no one remembers how they got here. The truth is simpler. A party that refuses to discipline itself cannot lead anyone. The few senators asking for transparency are doing the work leadership avoids. The rest treat the job like a cushy gig with perks. They built the swamp and guard it like property. Anyone who points out the rot pays for it. The Senate is feeling that now.
Feature Image: Created in Canva Pro/Magic Media (AI generated)
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