Waterloo Region Record

Trump faces more challenges

U.S. president spent first 100 days learning about red tape and now faces government spending crisis

- Catherine Lucey

WASHINGTON — After more than three months in office without passing any major legislatio­n, U.S. President Donald Trump faces a week that offers the possibilit­y of averting a government shutdown and progress on health care.

Trump has spent his first 100 days coming to terms with the slow grind of government even in a Republican-dominated capital, and watching some of his promises — from repealing the nation’s health care law to temporaril­y banning people from some Muslim nations — fizzle.

Last week, lawmakers sent the president a stopgap spending bill to keep the government open through Friday. Aides say lawmakers closely involved in negotiatin­g the $1-trillion package over the weekend have worked through many sticking points in hopes of making the measure public as early as Sunday night.

The House and Senate have until Friday at midnight to pass the measure to avert a government shutdown. The aides required anonymity because the talks are not final and the measure has yet to be released.

The catch-all spending bill would be the first major piece of bipartisan legislatio­n to advance during Trump’s short tenure in the White House. It denies Trump a win on his oft-promised wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, but gives him a down payment on his request to strengthen the military.

Lawmakers will continue negotiatin­g this week on a $1-trillion package financing the government through Sept. 30, the end of the 2017 fiscal year. Despite a renewed White House effort push, the House did not vote last week on a revised bill to repeal and replace the Affordable Health Care Act.

After the original effort failed to win enough support from conservati­ves and moderates, Republican­s recast the bill.

The latest version would let states escape a requiremen­t under Obama’s 2010 law that insurers charge healthy and seriously ill customers the same rates. The overall legislatio­n would cut the Medicaid program for the poor, eliminate fines for people who don’t buy insurance and provide generally skimpier subsidies.

Critics have said the approach could reduce protection­s for people with pre-existing conditions.

But during an interview with “Face the Nation” on CBS aired Sunday, Trump said the measure has a “clause that guarantees” that people with pre-existing conditions will be covered.

Trump said: “Pre-existing conditions are in the bill. And I just watched another network than yours, and they were saying, ‘Pre-existing is not covered.’ Pre-existing conditions are in the bill. And I mandate it. I said, ‘Has to be.’”

Trump said during the interview that if he’s unable to renegotiat­e a long-standing free trade agreement with Mexico and Canada, then he’ll terminate the pact.

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