The Jerusalem Post

Trump again threatens to shut down federal government over funding for wall

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) – US President Donald Trump said he would “totally be willing” to shut down the federal government unless Congress authorized $5 billion to fund his long-promised wall along the US border with Mexico, according to a Politico interview published on Wednesday.

Trump also told the news outlet, in the interview conducted on Tuesday, that the $5 billion request would pay for physical barrier alone, and that additional funding would be needed for other border security measures.

In a separate interview with the Washington Post on Tuesday, the Republican president said that if Congress does not fund the wall he might try to get it done another way. He referred to his ordering of US troops to the border in October to install “barbed wire and fencing and various other things.”

US lawmakers must act to pass a spending bill by December 7 to fund some government agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security that oversees the border and immigratio­n.

Trump has not followed through on previous threats to shut down the US government over the border wall funding. But with his fellow Republican­s set to lose control of the House of Representa­tives in January following Democrats’ gains in elections this month, Trump’s comments have raised concern that this time he may not back down.

Republican­s will maintain their control of the Senate next year but still need some Democratic support to pass spending legislatio­n.

Democrats have refused to support Trump’s border wall, which was a major part of his 2016 election platform, but have backed other border security measures.

Trump told Politico on Tuesday that he saw little need to work with Congress over immigratio­n reforms to address the roughly 700,000 so-called Dreamers, young adults who were brought to the United States illegally as children.

Instead, he said he wants to see first how court challenges play out over an Obama-era program that allowed Dreamers to stay in the country.

If the courts ultimately rule against the program, then he would be willing to negotiate over “border security and everything else,” he told Politico.

Legislatio­n to protect the Dreamers has so far failed to pass Congress.

 ?? (Alkis Konstatini­dis/Reuters) ?? MIGRANTS, PART of a caravan of thousands from Central America trying to reach the United States, bathe at a temporary shelter in Tijuana, Mexico, this week.
(Alkis Konstatini­dis/Reuters) MIGRANTS, PART of a caravan of thousands from Central America trying to reach the United States, bathe at a temporary shelter in Tijuana, Mexico, this week.

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