Far-left groups turn on Schumer for allowing shutdown to end, vow to primary him
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) is in a whole heap of trouble with the more radical left side of his party -- which seems to be the dominant side these days.
According to the New York Post, at least one far-left group has now launched an effort to primary Schumer, citing their anger for essentially giving in to Republicans in an effort to end the record-long government shutdown.
The radical left group, called "Indivisible," announced this week that it will launch its "largest primary program" in its history in an attempt to hold Schumer accountable for not doing what the group, and other radical leftists, wanted him to do regarding the government shutdown.
Notably, the grassroots organization is bankrolled by none other than ultra-radical leftist billionaire George Soros' Open Society Foundations organization. In other words, Schumer better be worried, because the group has teeth and influence.
What's going on?
Ezra Levin, co-founder and co-executive director of Indivisible, released a bombshell statement this week excoriating Schumer and the other Democrats who finally decided to vote in favor of ending the Democrat shutdown.
"Chuck Schumer and a critical mass of Senate Democrats surrendered," Levin wrote.
They added, "In these six weeks of the shutdown, Democrats had their best election night in over a decade."
"Instead of standing with that energy, Senate Democrats surrendered — yet again. That’s why Indivisible is launching our largest primary program yet,” Levin added. “This is no longer about them — it’s about us."
Soros-funded Indivisible (No Kings) chief announces “largest primary program” in their history after Democrat “surrender” in the Senate.
The rage is palpable:
“They capitulated entirely."
“Do you support Chuck Schumer for Senate leadership? If you do, we're not going to… pic.twitter.com/m1fVQx6iS6
— Western Lensman (@WesternLensman) November 11, 2025
The NY Post noted:
Schumer had opposed the bipartisan deal to end the 42-day funding lapse, but progressives have blamed him for failing to keep seven Democrats and one Democrat-aligned independent in line and keep the government’s lights off.
Social media reacts
Users across social media shared their thoughts on what might happen to Schumer and other Democrats after the shutdown ends.
"They are starting to turn on each other," one X user pointed out.
Another X user wrote, "This is great. Let them shift even more Left and even more people,will,wake up to the fact that they have no idea how to run anything efficiently, their policies make no sense and they are so stupid that they don't even realize this."
Only time will tell if the group is able to force Schumer out of office.






