House Speaker Mike Johnson has publicly accused Congressional Democrats of attempting to insert what he and GOP leaders describe as a “poison pill” into key funding legislation — a maneuver he says would undermine recent bipartisan efforts to keep the federal government funded and avoid a shutdown. In remarks at a press event in March, Johnson defended the Republican-backed continuing resolution (CR) as a “clean” funding measure, free of controversial riders or policy changes, and insisted that charges from Democratic leaders claiming otherwise were misinformation. According to Johnson, Democrats were falsely asserting that the GOP bill included cuts to major social programs such as Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security — allegations he dismissed as completely unfounded.
The Speaker’s comments came amid intense negotiations over government funding, with Republicans striving to secure enough support to pass a short-term budget extension without attaching partisan priorities that could imperil approval. Johnson stressed that his leadership team expressly avoided burying unrelated policy riders — the so-called “poison pills” — within the text, saying the legislation was drafted to ensure essential services continue without disruption. He challenged reporters and the public to review the 99-page CR, asserting that it contains no cuts to veterans’ benefits or major entitlement programs and urging critics to point to specific provisions if they believed otherwise.