With the possibility of a government shutdown looming, Republicans can't find a way to set aside their divisions for the good of their country.

President Donald Trump seemed to acknowledge that the party's fate depended on it not being held responsible for a shutdown, which polls strongly indicate would be overwhelmingly blamed on them.

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On Thursday night, the House of Representatives managed to pass a stopgap spending bill that would keep the government from shutting down until Feb. 16. It would need roughly a dozen Democratic votes to pass in the Senate, however, and Democrats have made it clear that their priorities include protecting DACA beneficiaries, increasing aid to Puerto Rico, improving the government's response to the opioid crisis and bolstering domestic spending, according to The New York Times.

But even Senate Republicans aren't unified in the spending bill.

"I had a commitment to have a DACA vote on the floor — bipartisan DACA vote on the floor — by the end of January," Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., explained in a statement. "Then all of a sudden the condition was put on of if the president supports it. We don't know what the president supports. I maintain the only way to find what the president supports is to put something on the floor and vote on it."

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As a result, Flake said, he was "not inclined to vote for a CR." Republican strategist Rick Wilson noted that overall there are five Republicans who are saying no while Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., is unavailable to cast his vote.

That makes Republican talking points — that this is a Democratic shutdown — pretty hard to believe.

"If Democrats vote in insufficient numbers for the short-term funding bill, and the government shuts down, the culprit will be easy to identify," Greg Sargent of The Washington Post wrote on Friday morning. "It will lie in the bottomless bad faith coming from President Trump, his hard-line anti-immigration advisers and some Republicans — and with Trump’s openly advertised racism and white nationalism."

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David Frum, senior editor of The Atlantic, shared that view.

"The government shutdown is a sign of just how broken the Republican Party is. Why are we on the verge of a government shutdown?" Frum told Salon on Thursday. "Well because there's certain, everyone just understands, that there's a certain percentage of the Republican Party that will never vote for the financing to raise the debt ceiling to allow the government to continue to operate."

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The one issue that Republicans managed to take off the table was funding for the Children's Health Insurance Program, which the stopgap spending bill would fund for an additional six years. But the CHIP program is being reintroduced after funding lapsed months ago — and it's a blatant ploy to paint Democrats as anti-CHIP funding.

But remember that Republicans were derailed from an earlier agreement they had reached on CHIP when Trump sent out a random tweet opposing it thanks to the influence of one of his favorite TV shows, "Fox & Friends," according to Politico.