Schumer was responding to a question on NBCâs Meet the Press about a previous comment that any such effort by Trump would require âextraordinary actionâ by Democrats.Â
If âthe public is so, so angry and takes action â and certainly we Democrats will â it will trigger a mass movement from one end of the country to the other, something that we havenât seen in a very long time,â Schumer said.
Trumpâs push to test the limits of executive power has played out in a clash with a US district judge over the deportation flights of alleged Venezuelan gang members who ended up in a prison in El Salvador.Â
The judge, James Boasberg, admonished the administration for disregarding his order on March 15 to halt the deportation flights. Trump has dubbed Boasberg a âradical leftâ judge and called for his impeachment, prompting a rebuke by Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts.
Schumer struck a defiant tone toward his own party when asked about his decision to end a blockade by Senate Democrats against a Republican spending plan to avert a government shutdown.
âLook, Iâm not stepping down,â said Schumer, whose stance prompted a backlash among some Democrats. Those questioning his decision include former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
A shutdown âwould be 15 or 20 times worseâ by handing the Trump administration an opportunity to âeviscerateâ the government, he said.
Schumer argued that Democrats shouldnât allow themselves to be split over disagreements about how to deal with the short-term spending bill, known as a continuing resolution.
âOur goal, our plan, which weâre united on, is to make Donald Trump the quickest lame duck in modern history by showing how bad his policies are,â Schumer said.
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