'We want our pay!' furloughed U.S.
workers shout at White House
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[January 11, 2019]
By Deborah Gembara
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Hundreds of
furloughed federal employees chanting "We want our pay!" marched on the
White House on Thursday, the 20th day of a partial government shutdown
over U.S. President Donald Trump's demand for border wall funding.
"Stop the shutdown!" protesters shouted in the bitter cold at the
union-organized demonstration that started at the AFL-CIO headquarters
and ended in front of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, where they hoisted signs
reading "Trump: End the Shutdown" and "Not a strike - we want to work."
Some 800,000 federal government employees have been ordered to stay home
or work without pay during the shutdown brought on by a standoff between
Trump and Democrats in Congress over Trump's demand for $5.7 billion to
build a wall on the southern U.S. border with Mexico.
Trump, in a 2016 presidential campaign promise, repeatedly vowed that
Mexico would pay for the wall. But he has said he will not sign any bill
to reopen the government that does not provide wall funding.
Elaine Suriano, 62, a furloughed scientist with the Environmental
Protection Agency, said she would have to dip into her retirement
savings if the shutdown continued and robbed her of yet another
paycheck.
"It's just clear that this administration doesn't understand normal
people and real life or they wouldn't do this," Suriano said.
In its third week, the shutdown of about a quarter of the federal
government is the second longest since the mid-1970s. Trump has said it
could continue for months or even years.
Many furloughed federal workers have turned to online fundraising
outlets such as GoFundMe.com to help cover expenses from food to utility
bills.
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Demonstrators march during a “Rally to End the Shutdown” in
Washington, U.S., January 10, 2019. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
Mathew Crichton, 32, a furloughed Peace Corps employee, said
uncertainty over how long the shutdown will last made it impossible
to budget for food, lodging and other needs.
"It could go on another day, and it could go on more weeks. It could
go on for months," Crichton said. "It's really a shame that I'm
ready to go to work. I'm able to go to work and I can't."
Protesters, many wearing neon green vests reading, "I am a worker. I
demand a voice," on Thursday demanded the government be reopened,
separate from any debate over wall funding.
Smaller protests across the country – from Palm Beach, Florida, to
New York City - had similar demands. In Ogden, Utah, dozens of
out-of-work federal employees gathered to urge an end to the
shutdown, some holding signs reading “I am TSA. I am furloughed. I
am not a pawn. I’m a voter” and “800,000 unemployed. Hurts our
family and our economy.”
Trump was not at the White House when the protesters arrived, having
traveled to the U.S.-Mexico border in McAllen, Texas.
The president has said he has the right to declare a national
emergency if no deal with Congress can be reached on funding the
border wall project.
(Additional reporting by Katharine Jackson in Washington and Barbara
Goldberg in New York; editing by Bill Berkrot)
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