U.S. Congress aim to delay border wall
funding fight until December
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[September 14, 2018]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Congress
negotiators on Thursday moved to put off until after the Nov. 6
elections decisions on future funding for President Donald Trump's
multibillion-dollar southwest border wall, as lawmakers advanced
legislation funding many other government programs.
Racing against a Sept. 30 deadline when the current fiscal year ends,
Republicans and Democrats were showing unusual cooperation in trying to
fund most federal agency functions and avoid an embarrassing government
shutdown about a month before congressional elections.
A trio of massive spending bills were making their way through Congress
to fund military, energy and a range of other programs that otherwise
would run out of money on Oct. 1.
But House Appropriations Committee Chairman Rodney Frelinghuysen said
that some decisions will have to be put off until Dec. 7, after
congressional elections.
That means that Congress would continue to fund agencies such as the
Department of Homeland Security at current year levels on a temporary
basis.
In recent weeks, Trump has threatened a government shutdown unless he
got the money he wanted to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border to
keep illegal immigrants and illegal drugs out of the United States.
A White House spokeswoman would not say whether Trump would go along
with Congress' plans if lawmakers did not immediately meet his demand
for more border wall funding.
"We look forward to reviewing the bill when it’s released," said White
House spokeswoman Lindsay Walters.
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Different generations of the U.S. border wall with Mexico are seen
from the United States in Nogales, Arizona, September 13, 2018.
REUTERS/Adrees Latif

Trump campaigned for president in 2016 vowing to build a wall that
he said Mexico would finance.
But Mexico has balked and Trump instead has had to turn to Congress
for construction funds. Lawmakers provided $1.57 billion this year
for physical barriers and related technology along the southwest
border.

Some have estimated the total cost of the edifice at more than $24
billion.
(Reporting By Richard Cowan; editing by Grant McCool)
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