As parties battle over shutdown, Trump
collects blame on Twitter
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[January 22, 2018]
By Maria Caspani
(Reuters) - As midnight neared on Friday
and the U.S. government barreled toward a shutdown, Republicans and
Democrats sought to apportion blame for the deadlock with a battle of
social media hashtags.
By the time the deadline had passed without a deal and exhausted
senators returned home to bed, #TrumpShutdown was fast becoming the top
trending item on Twitter worldwide.
In an early indication of who was being held responsible for the impasse
in Washington, at least among users of the social networking site early
on Saturday, that hashtag beat competitors including #DemocratShutdown
and #GOPShutdown.
"This will be called the #TrumpShutdown," Senate Democratic leader Chuck
Schumer tweeted after government funding expired. "There is no one who
deserves the blame for the position we find ourselves in more than
President (Donald) Trump."
Many who shared the hashtag decried a lack of leadership from the
Republican president, in sharp contrast to his self-crafted image as a
dealmaker who would make Washington work.
As both parties exchanged online blows, some of Trump's supporters,
including White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders, sought to push the
hashtag #SchumerShutdown.
A year into Trump's presidency, Sanders wrote on Twitter, Democrats
could not shut down the country's booming economy, so they shut down the
government instead.
"This is the behavior of obstructionist losers, not legislators,"
Sanders tweeted. "Do your job Democrats: Fund our military and reopen
our government #SchumerShutdown."
By Saturday afternoon the hashtag #TrumpShutdown had been used some 2.6
million times on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, according to social
media analytics platform Talkwalker. That was roughly double the 1.3
million mentions of #SchumerShutdown during the same period.
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A woman walks past a statue of Benjamin Franklin after President
Donald Trump and the U.S. Congress failed to reach a deal on funding
for federal agencies on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., January
20, 2018. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
The hashtag #GOPShutdown appeared about 236,000 times, Talkwalker said,
compared with approximately 107,000 uses of #DemShutdown or some
variation of that.
Republicans control both the House of Representatives and Senate. With
negotiations due to resume among lawmakers, Trump himself took to
Twitter on Saturday to tell his nearly 47 million followers that the
Democrats were holding the military hostage because of what he said was
their desire for "unchecked illegal immigration."
"Can't let that happen!" Trump tweeted.
By early afternoon on Saturday, the top-trending hashtag in the United
States was #WomensMarch2018, for the weekend rallies reprising mass
protests that marked the beginning of Trump's presidency. It was
followed by a more bipartisan #governmentshutdown2018.
Some saw the online hashtag duels as a distraction from an avoidable
crisis roiling the world's most powerful government.
"I hope this debacle ends soon, and with it the annoying shutdown
hashtag battle to assess blame," tweeted David Axelrod, who was senior
adviser to former President Barack Obama.
(Reporting by Maria Caspani; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Lisa Von Ahn)
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