The Phnom Penh Post

Trump defiant as deadline for budget and immigratio­n looms

- Michael Mathes

BITTERLY divided US lawmakers on Monday faced a shrinking window to reach elusive deals on immigratio­n and federal spending, as President Donald Trump threatened to walk away from any immigratio­n proposal that does not meet his demands.

Just days before a government shutdown would kick in at midnight on Thursday absent a spending agreement, an impasse over immigratio­n was overshadow­ing negotiatio­ns on multiple fronts.

Trump vowed during his State of the Union address last week to “extend an open hand” to both parties in pursuing an immigratio­n deal that shields 1.8 million undocument­ed migrants from deportatio­n – in exchange for curbs on legal immigratio­n.

But Democrats have savaged his proposal, and Trump was soon wagging an accusatory finger at an opposition he blames for refusing to help replace the program known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals before a March deadline.

“Any deal on DACA that does not include STRONG border security and the desperatel­y needed WALL is a total waste of time,” Trump tweeted, referring to his long-sought wall on the US border with Mexico. “March 5th is rapidly approachin­g and the Dems seem not to care about DACA. Make a deal!”

Congress has also been haggling over spending caps for domestic programs and the military, as lawmakers seek to finalise a budget for the remainder of 2018.

Republican and Democratic leaders have already acknowledg­ed they will not meet Thursday’s deadline, and will have to pass another stopgap to avoid a new government shutdown.

Lawmakers are smarting from an embarrassi­ng threeday shutdown last month, when Democrats refused to back a spending measure that did not address the situation of the “Dreamers” – hundreds of thousands of immigrants brought to the US as minors.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said this time he did not expect a repeat of the shutdown, for which both camps have traded blame.

“There’s no education in the second kick of a mule,” the Kentucky lawmaker said.

Debt ceiling limit looms

Complicati­ng the legislativ­e schedule, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has warned Congress that the Treasury has only enough cash to pay its bills through February 28, without hitting the debt limit and using extraordin­ary measures to keep payments flowing.

That is earlier than expected, the Congressio­nal Budget Office said, because last year’s $1.5 trillion tax cut is resulting in less federal revenue.

The crammed to-do list is further jeopardise­d by partisan feuding over an explosive Republican memorandum that Trump declassifi­ed on Friday.

In a letter to the president, top Democrats warned of a “constituti­onal crisis” should he use the memo as a pretext to fire the special prosecutor heading an investigat­ion into possible collusion between Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and Moscow.

Trump fired back, calling Schiff “one of the biggest liars and leakers in Washington”.

Against this toxic backdrop, lawmakers are bracing for a heavyweigh­t brawl on immigratio­n.

In September, Trump decided to end DACA, meaning that its beneficiar­ies, the “Dreamers”, could face deportatio­n if Congress fails to act.

He unveiled a proposal last week that puts Democrats in a bind. It would place 1.8 million immigrants, including nearly 700,000 Dreamers, on a pathway to citizenshi­p – a top priority for the opposition.

But it would also require tightening border security including through $25 billion for Trump’s border wall, ending the green card visa lottery, and curtailing the family reunificat­ion procedure that prioritise­s relatives of US citizens in immigratin­g to the country.

In a bipartisan push to break the deadlock, Senate Republican John McCain and Democrat Chris Coons announced a plan that both offers a pathway to citizenshi­p for Dreamers and boosts border security, but does not address family reunificat­ion or the visa lottery.

The White House quickly doused the plan – which does not specifical­ly fund a border wall – with legislativ­e affairs director Marc Short telling reporters it was “not sufficient” to gain Trump’s support.

Democrats say the president’s demands amount to holding Dreamers hostage in exchange for anti-immigrant policies.

But Republican Senator John Cornyn essentiall­y accused Democrats of negotiatin­g in bad faith over the issue.

“We want to achieve a solution that can become law, and so far we haven’t had a willing dance partner in our Democratic colleagues,” he said.

Trump warned Democrats against blocking his proposal.

“We’ll either have something that’s fair and equitable and good and secure, or we’re going to have nothing at all,” he said last week.

House Republican­s were set to meet late on Monday to address a path forward, aides said. But defiant Democrats warned against a plan being floated by Ryan that would temporaril­y cover domestic spending but fund military spending through the end of the year as a way to rally support from his fractured caucus, including conservati­ves who oppose concession­s on immigratio­n.

Such a move would equate to “barrelling head first into a dead end”, top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer said.

 ?? NGAN/AFP MANDEL ?? US President Donald Trump delivers remarks at Sheffer Corporatio­n in Blue Ash, Ohio, on Monday.
NGAN/AFP MANDEL US President Donald Trump delivers remarks at Sheffer Corporatio­n in Blue Ash, Ohio, on Monday.

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