Norms Impact
Dems Failed to Scrap Filibuster Under Biden. Now Trump Wants ‘Nuclear Option’ to End Shutdown | Common Dreams
Trump presses Senate Republicans to erase the filibuster by raw majority power, collapsing a long-standing procedural brake to force an end to shutdown negotiations.
Oct 31, 2025
⚖ Legal Exposure
Sources
Summary
President Donald Trump urged Senate Republicans to use the “nuclear option” to eliminate the legislative filibuster to end a prolonged government shutdown without Democratic votes. The move would shift the Senate from a 60-vote threshold for most legislation toward routine simple-majority control by the governing party. That change would not only reopen the government but also clear a path for broader Republican policy proposals to pass with 53 seats.
Reality Check
Using the “nuclear option” to eliminate the filibuster to end a shutdown hardens a precedent that majority power can rewrite Senate constraints on demand, weakening stability and making our rights and benefits more vulnerable to abrupt partisan swings. Nothing here, as described, is likely criminal: the Senate has authority to change its rules by majority vote, and advocacy for doing so is not a federal offense. The deeper violation is governance-by-coercion—openly framing rule changes as a way to “take advantage” of the other party while millions face lost nutrition assistance and higher premiums—an abuse-of-power posture that corrodes anti–quid-pro-quo norms and normalizes procedural brinkmanship as a governing tool.
Legal Summary
The article describes a president urging Senate Republicans to eliminate the filibuster to end a shutdown, alongside intraparty pressure on Senate leadership—conduct that is politically aggressive but not inherently a prosecutable corruption transaction on these facts. No money, gifts, or personal-benefit exchange is alleged linking rule changes to official action, so structural quid-pro-quo exposure is not shown. The piece does allege an “illegal refusal” to use emergency funds for nutrition benefits, but it is not tied to a bribery or transactional corruption pattern in the provided context.
Legal Analysis
<h3>18 U.S.C. § 371 — Conspiracy to defraud the United States (impairing lawful government functions)</h3><ul><li>The article describes a presidential pressure campaign urging Senate Republicans to use the “nuclear option” to eliminate the filibuster to end a shutdown without minority-party support; this is hardball politics but not, on these facts alone, an agreement to use deceit or unlawful means to impair a lawful function.</li><li>The context includes an “illegal refusal to tap emergency funds” to pay nutrition benefits during the shutdown; however, the article does not connect that alleged illegality to a coordinated scheme tied to the filibuster maneuver.</li></ul><h3>2 U.S.C. § 437g / 52 U.S.C. Ch. 301 (FECA) — Bribery/illegal coordination via political contributions</h3><ul><li>No facts in the article indicate money, donations, gifts, or other things of value offered or received in exchange for an official act (changing Senate rules or votes).</li><li>Absent any financial transfer or benefit tied to rule changes, the classic structural quid-pro-quo corruption pattern is not present in the provided context.</li></ul><h3>18 U.S.C. § 201 — Bribery of public officials and witnesses</h3><ul><li>Rule-change advocacy and intraparty pressure are described, but the article contains no allegation of anything of value offered/received to influence a senator’s official act.</li><li>Without a thing-of-value exchange or personal benefit allegation, elements are not met on the stated facts.</li></ul><h3>18 U.S.C. § 1346 — Honest services fraud</h3><ul><li>The facts presented involve political leverage and procedural maneuvering; there is no alleged kickback/bribe scheme or concealed personal enrichment.</li><li>The alleged “illegal refusal” to use emergency funds could implicate separate administrative-law/compliance issues, but the article does not supply a corruption-based deprivation theory.</li></ul><b>Conclusion:</b> The described conduct is best characterized as procedural/political irregularity and pressure rather than a money-access-official-action corruption scheme; the article does not present transactional facts supporting prosecutable public-corruption charges, though it flags potential unlawfulness in shutdown-related benefits administration outside the filibuster issue.
Media
Detail
<p>Late Thursday, President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social urging Senate Republicans to “INITIATE THE ‘NUCLEAR OPTION,’ GET RID OF THE FILIBUSTER” to end the government shutdown without Democratic support. Trump cited Democrats’ unsuccessful effort to eliminate the filibuster during former President Joe Biden’s term and named former Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema as key obstacles to reform.</p><p>Under current Senate rules, most legislation requires 60 votes, and Republicans hold 53 seats. Commentators and advocates noted that the “nuclear option” allows a Senate majority to change its rules, including ending the filibuster, without extended lead time. Senate Majority Leader John Thune previously said he opposed scrapping the filibuster to end the shutdown, though his position could shift under pressure.</p><p>The shutdown is described as placing millions at risk of losing federal nutrition assistance, alongside expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies that could raise premiums if not extended.</p>