Journal Pioneer

Not on the table

Trump rejects suggested short-term government shutdown fix

- BY CATHERINE LUCEY AND DARLENE SUPERVILLE

President Donald Trump on Monday rejected the suggestion that he temporaril­y reopen government while negotiatio­ns continue on his proposed border wall, signalling no speedy resolution to the partial government shutdown now into a fourth week.

Leaving the White House for a trip to New Orleans, Trump said he had dismissed the proposal from Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham to reopen for several weeks and continue dealing with Democrats over Trump’s longpromis­ed wall on the U.S.-Mexico border.

“I did reject it, yes,” Trump said. “I’m not interested. I want to get it solved. I don’t want to just delay it.”

Trump also backed further away from the idea of declaring a national emergency as an escape hatch, saying: “I’m not looking to call a national emergency. This is so simple we shouldn’t have to.” As Congress returned to Washington for their second week of legislativ­e business since House control reverted to Democrats, the shutdown hit Day 24, affecting federal workers and services with no end in sight. Trump has demanded $5.7 billion for his long-promised wall, while Democrats, who oppose the wall as both immoral and wasteful, insist Trump re-open the government before they negotiate border security.

From the White House, Trump argued that he alone was ready to negotiate, noting that a group of House and Senate Democrats were touring hurricane-ravaged Puerto Rico.

“A lot of the Democrats were in Puerto Rico celebratin­g something. I don’t know, maybe they’re celebratin­g the shutdown,” Trump said. Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer were not on the trip to Puerto Rico. Pelosi spokesman Drew Hammill tweeted Monday: “Speaker Pelosi has been in DC all weekend working from the Capitol.” Trump also targeted Pelosi and Schumer on Twitter, arguing that the shutdown “has become their, and the Democrats, fault!” But Trump weeks ago asserted that he would “own” the shutdown and polls show that he is taking most of the blame. Trump has kept Washington on edge over whether he would resort to an emergency declaratio­n, citing what he says is a “crisis” of drug smuggling and the traffickin­g of women and children at the border. The president initially sounded as though such a move was imminent, but then pulled back. He has said several times since he first mentioned the idea in public this month that he prefers a legislativ­e solution.

A key question is how much more time is Trump willing to give lawmakers. Graham, who spoke with Trump by telephone on Sunday morning, said the legislativ­e path “is just about shut off” and blamed intransige­nce by Pelosi.

The speaker’s office had no immediate comment. Democrats oppose an emergency declaratio­n but may be powerless to block it. Some Republican­s are wary, too, fearing how a future Democratic president might use that authority. Such a move, should Trump ultimately go that route, would almost certainly be challenged in the courts.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? President Donald Trump gestures after arriving at McAllen Internatio­nal Airport for a visit to the southern border in McAllen, Texas, last week.
AP PHOTO President Donald Trump gestures after arriving at McAllen Internatio­nal Airport for a visit to the southern border in McAllen, Texas, last week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada