The Telegram (St. John's)

Trump doesn’t expect new shutdown

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WASHINGTON — Under mounting pressure from his own party, President Donald Trump appears to be grudgingly leaning toward accepting an agreement that would head off a threatened second government shutdown but provide just a fraction of the money he’s been demanding for his Mexican border wall.

Trump said Tuesday he would need more time to study the plan, but he also declared that he was not expecting another shutdown this weekend when funding for parts of the government would run out. He also strongly signalled he planned to scrounge up additional dollars for the wall by raiding other federal coffers to deliver on the signature promise of his presidenti­al campaign.

“I can’t say I’m happy. I can’t say I’m thrilled,” Trump said of the proposed deal. “But the wall is getting built, regardless. It doesn’t matter because we’re doing other things beyond what we’re talking about here.”

Trump sounded more conciliato­ry in a Tuesday night tweet, thanking “all Republican­s for the work you have done in dealing with the Radical Left on Border Security.”

Accepting the deal, worked out by congressio­nal negotiator­s from both parties, would be a disappoint­ment for a president who has repeatedly insisted he needs $5.7 billion for a barrier along the U.s.-mexico border, saying the project is paramount for national security. Trump turned down a similar deal in December, forcing the 35-day partial shutdown that left hundreds of thousands of federal workers without paychecks and Republican­s reeling. There is little appetite in Washington for a repeat.

Lawmakers tentativel­y agreed to a deal that would provide nearly $1.4 billion for border barriers and keep the government funded for the rest of the fiscal year, which ends on Sept. 30. Filling in the details has taken some time, as is typical, and aides reported Wednesday that the measure had hit some snags, though they doubted they would prove fatal.

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said that the billwriter­s were “still tinkering” with the legislatio­n’s language and that the president was awaiting a final version.

“We want to see the final piece of legislatio­n, and we’ll make a determinat­ion at that point,” she said Wednesday.

Still, she said that, while “the president isn’t fully happy” with everything in the bill, “there are some positive pieces of it.” Trump has made clear in phone calls since the deal was announced that he had wanted more money for the wall. And he has expressed concern the plan is being spun as a defeat for him in the media, according to a Republican familiar with the president’s interactio­ns but not authorized to speak publicly about private conversati­ons. Still, many expected him to sign on nonetheles­s. The agreement would allow 88 kilometres of new fencing — constructe­d using existing designs such as metal slats — but far less than the 345 kilometres the White House demanded in December. The fencing would be built in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley.

Full details were not expected to be released until later Wednesday as lawmakers worked to translate their verbal agreement into legislatio­n. But Republican leaders urged Trump to sign on.

“I hope he signs the bill,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, who joined other GOP leaders in selling it as a necessary compromise that represente­d a major concession from Democrats.

Lawmakers need to pass some kind of funding bill to avoid another shutdown at midnight Friday and have worked to avoid turning to another short-term bill that would only prolong the border debate.

Speaking at a Cabinet meeting Tuesday, Trump he didn’t think another shutdown was going to happen, but he also made clear that, if he does sign the deal, he is strongly considerin­g supplement­ing it by moving money from what he described as less important areas of government.

“We have a lot of money in this country and we’re using some of that money — a small percentage of that money — to build the wall, which we desperatel­y need,” he said.

 ?? AP J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE ?? Sen. Richard Shelby, R-ala., chair of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee and the top Senate GOP border security negotiator, speaks to reporters about the bipartisan compromise worked out in hope of averting another government shutdown, at the Capitol in Washington on Tuesday. •
AP J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE Sen. Richard Shelby, R-ala., chair of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee and the top Senate GOP border security negotiator, speaks to reporters about the bipartisan compromise worked out in hope of averting another government shutdown, at the Capitol in Washington on Tuesday. •

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