Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va.:

Well, Judy, I'm not going to talk about any specific meetings.

I know there's a number of us in both parties talking about how we get the government reopened.

The kind of stories that I'm hearing from federal employees, even if they get their back pay, if you have taken out your money from your IRA, you have still got to pay a tax penalty. If you're taking an advance against your credit card, you have still got to pay fees.

We had one family last week that brought in their seven-week-old baby. And they had tried to get their baby on their health insurance, and the person to fulfill the form was furloughed. So when the doctor gave them a prescription, luckily, the insurance company finally put that baby on the insurance form.

But there are stories like that where people shouldn't have to go through this kind of — this kind of stress. And I think, actually — and I was a business guy. I was a governor where I had a 2-1 Republican legislature.

I think, when history looks back at Trump's actions, I think business schools will write case studies about how not to negotiate based on Donald Trump, the dealmaker's approach.

If you look business rules 101, try to make sure both sides can claim there's a win-win. If you are empowering people, try to make sure they can negotiate on your behalf. If you're going to have a work force, try to bring them on your side. If you're going to do these things, have advisers that will tell you the truth.

On every one of those, Donald Trump has broken all of the traditional rules of how you negotiate for successful — and I think — and, again, I think it's pretty remarkable that a guy that said he was a dealmaker seems to have fumbled this and has hurt so many people in so many ways.