Kuwait Times

Trump, Republican­s face task of averting shutdown Border wall and Obamacare funding tricky issues

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President Donald Trump and his fellow Republican­s who control Congress face their first major budget test next week, with the threat of a US government shutdown potentiall­y hinging on his proposed Mexican border wall as well as Obamacare funding.

With Republican­s controllin­g the White House and both chambers of Congress, keeping the federal government operating is a basic test of their ability to govern, but their task could become even more complicate­d if they insist on using the spending legislatio­n to bring about contentiou­s policy changes.

Not only must Republican­s overcome intraparty ideologica­l divisions that stopped major healthcare legislatio­n last month, but they will have to win over some opposition Democrats with provisions that could be distastefu­l to conservati­ves. With the Senate reconvenin­g on Monday and the House of Representa­tives on Tuesday after a twoweek recess, lawmakers will have only four days to pass a spending package to keep the government open beyond April 28, when funding expires for numerous federal programs.

“I think we want to keep the government open,” Trump said on Thursday, adding he thinks Congress can pass the funding legislatio­n and perhaps also a revamped healthcare bill. Democratic support depends on what provisions Republican­s demand in the bill. Democrats have signaled they would not cooperate if it contains money for one of Trump’s top priorities, a southweste­rn border wall intended to combat illegal immigratio­n, or if it ends federal subsidies to help low-income people buy health insurance under the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, which Republican­s want to repeal.

Democrats also want federal funds maintained for Planned Parenthood, which many Republican­s oppose because the women’s healthcare provider performs abortions. Another obstacle would be if Trump demands large defense spending increases coupled with deep cuts to domestic programs Democrats want to protect.

Balancing act

Late on Thursday, leading House Democrats were voicing skepticism a deal could be reached by the deadline. In a telephone call for House Democrats, Representa­tive Nita Lowey, the senior Democrat on the House Appropriat­ions Committee, said: “I don’t see how we can meet that deadline” and avoid having to pass a short-term extension, according to an aide on the call. The second-ranking House Democrat, Representa­tive Steny Hoyer, told his fellow Democrats that they should only support such a short-term measure if a deal on longterm bill is reached and only finishing touches remained, the aide said.

Republican leaders face a familiar balancing act: satisfying the party’s most conservati­ve members while not alienating its moderates. Rules in the 100seat Senate mean Trump’s party also would need the support of at least eight Democrats even if the Republican­s remain unified, giving the opposition party leverage. House Republican leaders would need some Democratic votes if the most conservati­ve lawmakers object to the bill, as they did to the healthcare plan championed by Speaker Paul Ryan. With congressio­nal elections looming next year, Republican­s acknowledg­e the stakes are high.

“Even our most recalcitra­nt members understand that if you shut down the government while you’re running it and you control the House and the Senate, you can’t blame anybody but yourself,” said Representa­tive Tom Cole, a senior House Appropriat­ions Committee Republican.

White House budget director Mick Mulvaney said the Trump administra­tion was willing to talk to Democrats about funding for Obamacare subsidies in exchange for their agreement to include some Trump priorities such as the wall, the defense hike and more money for immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

“It is ripe for some type of negotiated agreement that gives the president some of his priorities and Democrats some of their priorities. So we think we’ve opened the door for that,” Mulvaney said. Democrats reacted negatively. “Everything had been moving smoothly until the administra­tion moved in with a heavy hand. Not only are Democrats opposed to the wall, there is significan­t Republican opposition as well,” said Matt House, a spokesman for Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer.

Furlough Lady Liberty

The government was last forced to close in October 2013, when Republican Senator Ted Cruz and some of the most conservati­ve House Republican­s engineered a 17-day shutdown in an unsuccessf­ul quest to kill Democratic former President Barack Obama’s healthcare law.

“These kind of bills can’t pass without a reasonable number of the party of the minority in the Senate, and we are optimistic we will be able to work all that out,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said at the start of the spring recess. A deal is needed because Congress was unable to approve funding for the entire 2017 fiscal year that ends in September and has relied on stop-gap spending legislatio­n.

Congress has passed no major legislatio­n since Trump took office in January, and he has ambitious hopes for major tax-cut legislatio­n, infrastruc­ture spending and other bills. With the difficulty passing a bill with so many divisive elements, lawmakers next week might need to buy time by passing a short-term bill lasting possibly one to three weeks, maintainin­g current spending levels. “That would be a setback: not catastroph­ic, but not a good thing, and a sign that you can’t govern,” Cole said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? MIAMI LAKES: In this July 19, 2016 file photo, people stand in line to register for a job fair, in Miami Lakes, Florida. The Labor Department reported that more people sought US unemployme­nt benefits the week before, yet total applicatio­ns remained at...
MIAMI LAKES: In this July 19, 2016 file photo, people stand in line to register for a job fair, in Miami Lakes, Florida. The Labor Department reported that more people sought US unemployme­nt benefits the week before, yet total applicatio­ns remained at...

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