Journal Pioneer

‘Other ways’ to get funding

White House pulls back from shutdown threat over wall funds

- BY LISA MASCARO, JILL COLVIN AND MATTHEW DALY

The White House on Tuesday appeared to inch away from forcing a partial government shutdown over funding for a southern border wall, with Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders saying there are “other ways” to secure the $5 billion in funding that President Donald Trump wants.

It was the first sign of a potential White House counter offer as the clock ticks down toward Friday’s deadline to fund the government.

“At the end of the day, we don’t want to shut down the government,” Sanders said on Fox News. “We want to shut down the border from illegal immigratio­n.”

Trump’s $5 billion is far more than the $1.3 billion Democrats have offered, which is not for Trump’s promised wall along the southern border with Mexico, but fencing and other security measures.

Sanders pointed to one bill, likely referring to the Senate’s bipartisan appropriat­ion measure for the Department of Homeland Security, which provides $26 billion, including $1.6 billion for fencing and other barriers. It was approved by the committee in summer on a bipartisan vote. “That’s something that we would be able to support,” she said, as long as it’s coupled with other funding, such as using defence money on border security. What other funds could be tapped to satisfy the president’s demand remains unclear. Asked about using military funds, Sanders said, “There’s certainly a number of different funding sources that we’ve identified that we can use that we can couple with the money that would be given through Congressio­nal appropriat­ions that would help us get to that $5 billion that the president needs in order to protect our borders.”

The fight over Trump’s border wall has brought Congress to a familiar standoff just days before Christmas.

It wasn’t always like this, with Congress and the White House at a crisis over government funding. The House and Senate used to pass annual appropriat­ion bills, and the president signed them into law. But in recent years the shutdown scenario has become so routine that it raises the question: Have shutdowns as a negotiatin­g tool lost their punch? A partial shutdown that could occur at midnight Friday risks disrupting government operations and leaving hundreds of thousands of federal employees furloughed or working without pay over the holiday season. Costs would be likely in the billions of dollars.

Trump was meeting with his team and getting regular updates, Sanders said. Trump has also tweeted to keep up the pressure.

Exiting a Senate Republican leadership meeting late Monday, Sen. John Thune of South Dakota said, “It looks like it probably is going to have to build for a few days here before there’s a solution.”

The president is insisting on $5 billion for the wall, but he does not have the votes from the Republican-led Congress to support it.

It’s unclear how many House Republican­s, with just a few weeks left in the majority before relinquish­ing power to House Democrats, will even show up midweek for possible votes. Speaker Paul Ryan’s office had no update. Many Republican­s say it’s up to Trump and Democrats to cut a deal.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? President Donald Trump speaks following a ceremony signing the “America’s Water Infrastruc­ture Act of 2018” into law earlier this year in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington.
AP PHOTO President Donald Trump speaks following a ceremony signing the “America’s Water Infrastruc­ture Act of 2018” into law earlier this year in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington.

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