On Friday, Congress passed a bill that does three crucial things: it keeps the government running through December 8, rather than allowing it to shut down on October 1; it raises the debt limit so that the U.S. doesn’t default within the next month and send the markets into a panic; and it provides $15.25 billion in aid to victims affected by Hurricane Harvey in Texas and other areas of the Gulf Coast. Naturally, conservatives hated it. And they didn’t hesitate to express their displeasure Thursday with Donald Trump’s Treasury secretary, Steven Mnuchin, for asking them to vote for it:

Republican Study Committee Chairman Mark Walker of North Carolina asked Mnuchin why he even bothered meeting with conservatives over the summer if he was just going to ignore their input entirely. Another lawmaker said Trump “pissed off a whole lot of people in here” when he went against a joint leadership-White House plan to advocate for a longer debt limit increase that took the issue off the table until after the midterm elections.

And the room booed when [White House Budget Director Mick] Mulvaney and Mnuchin refused to commit to spending cuts during the next debt-ceiling debate—and then asked for their vote on the current legislation.

Republicans, who have made a pastime of kvetching every time the debt ceiling needs to be increased and attempting to extract sharp cuts to “entitlements” like health care for the poor, “hissed and groaned” at Mnuchin as he begged them yesterday to vote for the bill, Bloomberg reports. While party members were always going to put up a fight on any deal that had a debt-ceiling measure attached to it—especially one Trump made with Democrats—they were apparently extra ornery about Mnuchin’s inability to provide answers to any of their questions, which is ostensibly part of his job. “There were probably a lot of members in there in disbelief,” Rep. Ryan Costello told The Washington Post. “I do know that there is a lot of frustration with the deal that was cut by the president, and I think it’s a very difficult pill for many in there to swallow.”