Government partially shut down in fight
over Trump's border wall
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[December 22, 2018]
By James Oliphant, Ginger Gibson and Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government
was partially shut down early on Saturday in a fierce dispute over
President Donald Trump's demands that Congress assign $5 billion for a
wall along the border with Mexico.
After failing to strike a budget deal on Friday, congressional leaders
and the White House pledged to keep talking through the weekend in
search of a deal to end the shutdown ahead of the Christmas holiday.
The impasse came after Trump threw a wrench into the works earlier in
the week by refusing to agree to a short-term funding deal cut by
Democratic and Republican senators because it did not include the $5
billion for his border wall.
The U.S. House of Representatives, where Republicans have a majority
until Democrats take over on Jan. 3, then passed a bill that including
the $5 billion, but it ran aground in the Senate and the shutdown began
at midnight on Friday.
After it became clear the House bill lacked the votes to pass, Senate
leaders huddled with Vice President Mike Pence and other White House
officials to try to figure out a path forward.
They failed and lawmakers in both houses of Congress were sent home.
Trump tried to blame Democrats.
"We're going to have a shutdown. There's nothing we can do about that
because we need the Democrats to give us their votes," he said in a
video posted to his Twitter account two hours before the midnight
deadline.
Democrats repeatedly reminded Trump, and voters, that he said last week
he would be "proud" to shut the government down in order to get wall
funding.
"President Trump has thrown a temper tantrum and now has us careening
toward a 'Trump shutdown' over Christmas," Senate Democratic leader
Chuck Schumer said on the Senate floor on Friday.
About three-quarters of federal government programs are funded through
to Sept 30 next year, but the financing for all others - including the
departments of Homeland Security, Justice and Agriculture - expired at
midnight.
Federal parks will close and more than 400,000 federal "essential"
employees in those agencies will work without pay until the dispute is
resolved. Another 380,000 will be "furloughed", meaning they are put on
temporary leave.
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President Donald Trump talks to reporters as he participates in a
bill signing ceremony for the “First Step Act” and the “Juvenile
Justice Reform Act” in the Oval Office of the White House in
Washington, U.S., December 21, 2018. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
Law enforcement efforts, border patrols, mail delivery and airport
operations will keep running.
IMPASSE
For the shutdown to end, both the House and the Senate will have to
approve any deal negotiated between Trump's team and Republican and
Democratic leaders.
The shutdown could persist at least until a new Congress convenes on
Jan. 3, and Democrats take control of the House from Republicans.
That does not necessarily mean, however, that Trump would agree to a
compromise.
The shutdown comes at the end of a perilous week for the president,
one that saw Defense Secretary James Mattis resign in protest after
Trump's sudden decision to pull U.S. troops out of Syria.
The Syria move was widely criticized, even by senior Republicans in
Congress. And continued heavy losses in the stock market were in
part fueled by the political turmoil.
While Trump made the promise of building a border wall a fixture of
his 2016 election campaign, it is not a top-tier priority for most
Americans.
According to a Reuters/Ipsos poll in late November, only 31 percent
of those surveyed said improved border security should be one of the
top three priorities for Congress.
That suggests Trump is taking a political risk by gambling on a
shutdown to press his point at a time when Democrats are gearing up
for their 2020 presidential primary and looking for issues with
which to seize an advantage.
(Reporting by Ginger Gibson, James Oliphant, Richard Cowan, Humeyra
Pamuk, Roberta Rampton and Katanga Johnson; Editing by Kieran
Murray)
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