Dem Senator Busted On-Air After Denyi

The internet never forgets — and on Thursday morning, Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire learned that the hard way.
Appearing on Fox & Friends to discuss the ongoing government shutdown, Shaheen attempted to push back against one of the Republican Party’s most potent talking points: that Democrats are holding the federal government hostage in pursuit of taxpayer-funded healthcare for illegal immigrants.
But her attempt at damage control unraveled on live television when Fox host Lawrence Jones “rolled the tape,” reminding viewers — and Shaheen herself — of her party’s past promises.
The exchange, which quickly went viral online, captured in real time the political peril Democrats now face as the shutdown drags into its second week, with both parties accusing the other of intransigence.
“I haven’t heard anybody in my party saying that illegal immigrants should get access to the health insurance marketplace,” Shaheen said confidently, trying to draw a distinction between her position and that of progressives like Rep. Ilhan Omar and Sen. Bernie Sanders.
“I’m so glad you said that,” Jones replied. “Actually, I have some tape of your Democratic Party members saying this on the debate stage. Let’s play the clip.”
Democrat Sen. Jeanne Shaheen: I haven’t heard anybody in my party saying illegals should get taxpayer-funded health care!
— Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) October 2, 2025
*ROLLS THE TAPE*
Fox: “That’s literally every member of your party from moderate to more progressive…” pic.twitter.com/ziu6pMhLKO
Viewers then saw footage from the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries — a moment that aged poorly for Shaheen’s argument. On stage, every single candidate, from Kamala Harris and Joe Biden to Pete Buttigieg, Elizabeth Warren, and even the lesser-known hopefuls, raised their hands when asked if they supported healthcare coverage for illegal immigrants.
The crowd at the time cheered. But on Thursday morning, there was only awkward silence.
As the clip ended, Jones turned back to the senator. “That’s literally every member of your party,” he said pointedly.
“I beg to disagree with you,” Shaheen fired back. “I have not said that in the past. In New Hampshire, we do not provide health insurance for illegal immigrants. We have never done that, and you’re just wrong.”
Jones didn’t respond further — he didn’t need to. The video had already spoken louder than any talking point.
Republicans, including Vice President JD Vance and House Speaker Mike Johnson, have hammered Democrats for weeks over what they describe as “a shutdown over illegal immigrant healthcare.” The GOP maintains that Democrats refused to approve a short-term continuing resolution to fund the government unless it reinstated subsidies for undocumented immigrants under emergency Medicaid and “temporary protected status” programs.
Democrats, for their part, have denied that claim, insisting they only seek to restore Affordable Care Act subsidies and prevent premium spikes for low-income Americans. Yet, as Jones demonstrated on-air, their record tells a different story.
Clips from past debates, campaign speeches, and policy proposals show top Democrats repeatedly supporting expanded healthcare access for noncitizens. In 2019, for example, then-candidate Biden promised that undocumented immigrants “should be able to buy into the system like everyone else.” Sanders went further, proposing taxpayer-funded universal coverage “regardless of immigration status.”
That history makes the current denials ring hollow — especially amid growing public concern about border security and illegal immigration. Polling from Pew Research and Gallup over the summer found that nearly 70% of Americans oppose taxpayer-funded healthcare for illegal immigrants, including a majority of independents and more than a quarter of Democrats.
In that context, Shaheen’s televised stumble was more than an awkward moment — it was emblematic of a broader messaging problem within her party.
“The Democrats are trying to rewrite history,” conservative commentator Guy Benson said. “They were for it when it played well with the progressive base. Now that voters are angry about open borders, they’re suddenly pretending they never said any of this.”
Even moderate Democrats have quietly acknowledged the problem. Rep. Jared Golden (D-Maine), who voted with Republicans to fund the government earlier this month, said his party is “giving in to far-left groups” and losing credibility with working-class voters.