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		U.S. lawmakers search for remedies as 
		government shutdown rolls on 
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		 [January 25, 2019] 
		By Richard Cowan 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate, 
		after rejecting two shutdown-ending bills, was searching for a way to 
		end a government closure entering its 35th day and threatening the 
		economy, as hundreds of thousands of federal workers missed a second 
		paycheck on Friday.
 
 Republican President Donald Trump was dug in at the White House, 
		continuing to insist on funding for a wall he wants to build on the 
		U.S.-Mexico border, while the Democratic-led House of Representatives, 
		which opposes the wall, had left Washington for the weekend.
 
 On Thursday, a bill backed by Trump to end the shutdown by including 
		$5.7 billion he wants for the wall and a separate bill supported by 
		Democrats to reopen shuttered agencies without such funding did not get 
		the votes required to advance in the 100-member Senate.
 
		 
		
 Afterward, a bipartisan group of lawmakers said they were introducing an 
		amendment in the Senate to temporarily reopen the roughly one-quarter of 
		the federal government affected by the longest shutdown in U.S. history. 
		Senator Ben Cardin, one of the Democratic co-sponsors, said he did not 
		think it contained any wall funding.
 
 Trump said on Thursday that if Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch 
		McConnell and Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer reached an 
		agreement to end the shutdown, he would support it.
 
 The president also said, however, that a deal was "not going to work" 
		unless it included "a wall or a barrier." He said one suggestion was "a 
		pro-rated down payment for the wall."
 
 White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said a temporary measure to reopen 
		shuttered government departments and agencies must have "a large down 
		payment on the wall."
 
		A spokesman for Schumer said on Thursday night that Senate Democrats 
		"have made clear to Leader McConnell and Republicans that they will not 
		support funding for the wall, pro-rated or otherwise.”
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			At the end of a stormy day, the setting sun breaks through the 
			clouds to illuminate the White House in Washington, U.S., January 
			24, 2019. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque 
            
 
            Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters the possibility 
			of legislation that includes a large down payment on a wall, "is not 
			a reasonable agreement."
 McConnell told reporters on Thursday night: “We’re still talking. At 
			least we’re talking. I think that’s better than it was before.”
 
 The Senate was scheduled to work on Friday, but it was unclear 
			whether it might take any action on ending the shutdown.
 
 CNN reported on Thursday that the White House was preparing an 
			emergency declaration that Trump could issue to circumvent Congress 
			if lawmakers do not fund his wall.
 
 Asked about the report, a White House official, who spoke on 
			condition of anonymity, said: "Nothing is off the table, but we 
			still believe the best path forward is working with Congress on a 
			solution to the humanitarian and national security crisis at the 
			southern border."
 
 An emergency declaration would almost certainly be swiftly 
			challenged on constitutional grounds by Democrats.
 
 (Reporting by Richard Cowan; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Peter 
			Cooney)
 
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