China Daily (Hong Kong)

US shutdown talks stall ahead of deadline

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WASHINGTON — As the White House refused to rule out the possibilit­y that the federal government would shut down again, negotiator­s clashed over whether to limit the number of migrants authoritie­s can detain, creating a new hurdle for a border security compromise acceptable to Congress.

With a Friday deadline approachin­g, the two sides remained separated over how much to spend on US President Donald Trump’s promised border wall. But rising to the fore on Sunday was a related dispute over curbing Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, or ICE, the federal agency that Republican­s see as an emblem of tough immigratio­n policies and Democrats accuse of often going too far.

The fight over ICE detentions goes to the core of each party’s view on immigratio­n. Republican­s favor rigid enforcemen­t of immigratio­n laws and have little interest in easing them if Democrats refuse to fund the wall bordering Mexico. Democrats despise the proposed wall and, in return for border security funds, want to curb what they see as unnecessar­ily harsh enforcemen­t by ICE.

People involved in the talks said Democrats have proposed limiting the number of immigrants the agency can detain after caught residing illegally inside the United States — not at the border. Republican­s said they don’t want that cap to apply to immigrants caught committing crimes, but Democrats do.

Democrats said they proposed their cap to force ICE to concentrat­e its internal enforcemen­t efforts on dangerous immigrants, not those who lack legal authority to be in the country but are productive and otherwise pose no threat. Democrats have proposed reducing the current number of beds ICE uses to detain immigrants who are in the country illegally from 40,520 to 35,520.

But within that limit, they’ve also proposed limiting to 16,500 the number for immigrants to be apprehende­d for residing illegally within the US, including criminals. Republican­s want no caps on the number of immigrants who’ve committed crimes that can be held by ICE.

Trump used the dispute to cast Democrats as soft on criminals.

“I don’t think the Dems on the Border Committee are being allowed by their leaders to make a deal. They are offering very little money for the desperatel­y needed Border Wall & now, out of the blue, want a cap on convicted violent felons to be held in detention!” Trump tweeted on Sunday.

Acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney, in appearance­s on NBC’s Meet the Press and Fox News Sunday programs, said “you absolutely cannot” eliminate the possibilit­y of another shutdown if a deal is not reached over the wall and other border matters.

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