Republicans Are Sabotaging Trump, and Blaming Democrats for It!
The Senate GOP has the power to confirm 150+ nominees. Instead, they’re slow walking his agenda and selling the delays as “Democratic obstruction."
The Illusion of Urgency
Donald Trump is demanding the Senate “STAY IN WASHINGTON UNTIL EVERY NOMINEE IS CONFIRMED,” pounding away in all caps on social media like urgency alone could clear the logjam. The reality? The biggest obstacle to filling those seats isn’t Chuck Schumer, a Democratic filibuster, or even the slow grind of Senate procedure. It’s Trump’s own party.
Republicans control the Senate calendar. They have the votes, the gavel, and the procedural tools to ram through nominations. Yet, instead of blitzing the backlog of more than 150 pending nominees, they’ve let the process stall out, drowning in their own internal squabbles, backroom leverage plays, and unwillingness to negotiate.
Majority Leader John Thune could schedule marathon confirmation votes, strike deals to move nominees in batches, or at least keep senators locked in the chamber until the work is done. Instead, the Senate is lurching forward in fits and starts, with Republicans blaming Democrats for delays that their own tactics created.
The gap between Trump’s public fury and the GOP’s actual pace isn’t just embarrassing. It’s proof that the “urgency” is a talking point, not a governing strategy. The Senate is still here in August, not because Democrats blocked the exits, but because Republicans can’t agree on whether to open the door.
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The Real Numbers
As of the first week of August 2025, more than 150 Trump administration nominees remain stuck in Senate limbo, an executive branch parking lot that keeps growing while the engines idle. These aren’t fringe, ceremonial roles. They include key positions in national security, public health, foreign diplomacy, and economic policy.
On paper, Republicans have the power to confirm every single one of them. They hold the majority. They control the committees. They run the floor schedule. Yet instead of moving these nominees in efficient batches — a standard Senate practice when one party holds both the White House and the upper chamber — GOP leaders have let them trickle to the floor at a pace that would embarrass a sloth.
Why? Because Republicans have insisted on full, drawn-out roll call votes for dozens of appointees who could be confirmed by unanimous consent in under a minute. Each roll call burns hours of floor time. Multiply that by dozens of nominees, and you get exactly what we have now: a backlog that makes the DMV look like a drive-thru.
This isn’t about Democrats grinding the gears. It’s about Republicans refusing to turn the key. And the longer those seats stay empty, the more the Trump administration limps through its second term without the staff needed to run it.
See our recent reporting on one such situation here:
GOP Bottlenecks
If you listen to Republican leadership, the sluggish confirmation pace is all the fault of “Democratic obstruction.” But behind the closed doors of the Senate chamber, the truth is uglier: it’s Republican senators themselves who are gumming up the works.
Some, like Sen. Rand Paul, have used the confirmation process as a bargaining chip for unrelated policy demands, from foreign aid cuts to pet infrastructure projects back home. Others have signaled they won’t greenlight certain nominees until the White House proves its “MAGA loyalty test” is being enforced. These stunts eat up precious floor time and turn what could be a straightforward personnel process into a hostage negotiation.
Then there’s Majority Leader John Thune, who has the power to end much of this nonsense but hasn’t. Instead of forcing marathon voting sessions or cutting procedural deals to move nominees in large blocs, Thune has opted for a piecemeal approach that lets the bottlenecks persist. It’s a strategy that looks less like leadership and more like a man holding the door open for chaos.
The irony is brutal: while Trump rages about the delays, his own Senate allies are kneecapping him, not out of ideological resistance, but because they’re too busy jockeying for leverage, posturing for the cameras, or protecting their own turf. In the name of party unity, Republicans are quietly letting their own government run understaffed.
And just when you think the dysfunction can’t get more deliberate, Republicans found a new way to slow the process: weaponizing the Senate’s own summer break.
The Weaponized Recess
To hear GOP talking points, you’d think Democrats have chained the Senate doors shut, forcing Republicans to stay in Washington against their will. In reality, it’s Republicans who are holding themselves hostage, and it’s by design.
The August recess is more than a summer break. Constitutionally, it’s a window for the president to make recess appointments — temporary appointments that bypass Senate confirmation entirely. That power is a loaded weapon, and Senate Republicans don’t trust Donald Trump to aim it carefully.
Let that sink in. The same party that campaigned on “trusting Trump” doesn’t actually want to give him full hiring freedom. They remember how furious they were when Barack Obama used recess appointments, and they’ve quietly decided they’d rather slow-walk confirmations than let Trump do the same. By keeping the Senate technically in session — even if no real business is conducted — they block his ability to fill key vacancies unilaterally.
Majority Leader John Thune has dressed this up as “staying to do the people’s business,” but the truth is this maneuver is as much about controlling Trump as it is about confirming his picks. It’s a strategic choke point: deny recess, deny recess appointments, and keep the upper hand over the White House.
So while Trump is tweeting for speed, his own Senate allies have built a procedural speed bump, not to stop Democrats, but to stop him.
It’s a move that shatters the very promises they made to voters, promises we were told would define their second run in power.
After talking tough, Thune did finally close the Senate for recess without any significant confirmations.
Not a Real Recess, Not a Real Government
Technically, the Senate went on recess in August. They packed their bags, caught their flights, and told the press they’d be back after Labor Day. But here’s the trick: they never really left.
Instead of a true recess — the kind that would allow the president to fill empty positions with temporary appointments — Senate Republicans are holding pro forma sessions every few days. These are basically Senate meetings in name only: one senator strolls into an empty chamber, gavels in for 30 seconds, then gavels out. No business is done. No votes are held. But it keeps the Senate “in session” on paper — and that’s all it takes to block Trump from making recess appointments.
Let’s be clear: this isn’t a mistake. This is intentional. This is the same maneuver Mitch McConnell used to block Obama from filling vacancies. And now the Republican-led Senate is using it against Trump — the man they publicly swear loyalty to.
So while Trump screams on Truth Social about being “SABOTAGED,” he’s not wrong. But the sabotage isn’t coming from Democrats. It’s coming from the same Republican senators who are now sipping cocktails in their home districts while pretending to work.
This isn’t a recess. It’s a stage play. And the only thing real about it is the vacuum of leadership it leaves behind.
The Hypocrisy
In 2024, Senate Republicans campaigned like a pit crew ready to hit the track the moment the green flag dropped. They promised to “clear out the bureaucratic rot,” “hit the ground running,” and “restore government efficiency” on Day One. They warned that every day without Trump’s full team in place would put America at risk.
Fast forward to August 2025, and those same Republicans have turned into the world’s slowest mechanics, idling in the pit lane while the engine sputters. More than 150 nominees are still stalled, key agencies are limping along without confirmed leadership, and the only thing moving at full speed is the blame game.
Instead of delivering on their pledge to staff up fast, GOP senators have spent months bickering over loyalty tests, using nominees as bargaining chips, and dragging out roll call votes like it’s some kind of endurance sport. They’ve perfected the art of demanding urgency in front of cameras, then quietly pulling the emergency brake when the cameras are off.
This isn’t just hypocrisy. It’s governance as performance art. The people who told voters they’d make the Senate a conveyor belt for Trump’s agenda have built a bottleneck instead. And now they want the public to believe the jam was caused by Democrats, even though the Republicans themselves are the ones holding the wrench.
What This Costs the Country
Empty desks in Washington don’t just mean unused office space. They mean critical decisions aren’t being made, oversight isn’t happening, and the machinery of government is grinding down when it should be firing on all cylinders.
With over 150 nominees still in limbo, the ripple effects are everywhere:
National security: Key intelligence and defense posts remain unfilled, slowing coordination between agencies tasked with counterterrorism and cyber defense. In an age where threats move at the speed of code, even a few days’ delay can mean the difference between preventing an attack and cleaning up after one.
Public health: Agencies like the CDC and FDA are waiting on senior leadership to greenlight funding, approve new medical initiatives, and coordinate emergency responses. Every week without confirmed leadership is a week of drift.
Foreign policy: Ambassadorships sit vacant in strategically important nations, leaving U.S. diplomacy in the hands of acting officials with less authority and less credibility abroad.
Economic regulation: Without confirmed heads at financial oversight bodies, enforcement lags and policy decisions stall, a gift to bad actors and corporate cheats.
And here’s the kicker: these aren’t “Democrat picks” or partisan holdovers. These are Trump’s own nominees. The Senate Republican majority is so tangled in its own procedural games and political one-upmanship that it’s undermining the very administration it’s supposed to support.
While GOP senators posture about protecting the country, their inaction is leaving it exposed, and it’s ordinary Americans who will pay the price when the gaps in leadership turn into crises.
Final Call to Action
Let’s be honest. For once, Republican dysfunction is working in the country’s favor. The Senate GOP has tied its own shoelaces together, and every day they spend tripping over themselves is a day Trump’s most dangerous nominees aren’t running government agencies.
They’ll claim this is all about “vetting” or “procedure,” but really, it’s the oldest game in politics: stall, blame someone else, and hope the public isn’t paying attention. Normally, this kind of sabotage is infuriating. But when the target is Trump’s second-term agenda? That gridlock starts looking like a public service.
So here’s what you can do — not to fix the problem, but to keep it exactly where it is:
Don’t let them shift the blame. Make sure everyone knows this slowdown is homegrown in the Republican Senate, so they own it.
Amplify the chaos. Share every headline about missed votes, public spats, and GOP infighting. The more they fight, the less they legislate.
Block the escape hatches. If they try to cut a deal to ram nominees through, shine a light on it so the deal dies in the glare.
Cheer for the stalemate. A stalled Trump administration is a weaker Trump administration.
Yes, the government should function, but not as a conveyor belt for an authoritarian wish list. If Republicans want to grind Trump’s agenda into the dust for their own petty reasons, let’s just say: be our guest.
Stay Informed. Stay Loud.
Subscribe to The Coffman Chronicle for no-BS political analysis, action guides, and daily truth bombs you won’t get from corporate media.
Bibliography:
“Senate Delays August Recess for Now as Trump Presses for More Confirmations.” AP News, August 1, 2025.
“Inside Thune’s Logjam.” Axios, August 1, 2025.
“Senators Set to Leave Washington without Trump Nominees Deal.” Politico, August 2, 2025.
“Trump Blasts Recess-Ready Republicans in All-Caps Rant: ‘Do Your Job.’” The Daily Beast, July 31, 2025.
“What Are Recess Appointments, and Will President-Elect Trump Bring Them Back?” Arnold & Porter, November 14, 2024.





They really are pathetic cowards, who cannot even take responsibility for anything. What more proof do people need that their whole personal responsibility schtick was always just a lie and a cover for malignant narcissism and sociopathic egomania and greed?
Remember, many of them just want to see the government burn. They have no problem delaying appointments to agencies they don't want to exist.