Weekend Herald

Shutdown shunted to New Year

President Trump defiant over funding impasse for border wall and criticism of crossing a political line with US troops overseas

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Congress effectivel­y gave up on breaking the impasse over US President Donald Trump’s demands for border-wall funding, all but ensuring that the partial government shutdown will stretch at least into the start of the New Year, when Democrats retake control of the House.

Trump retreated from public view, hurling insults at Democrats over Twitter, as the House and the Senate convened for just minutes before gavelling closed until next week. During the brief session in the House, Republican­s shot down a Democratic attempt to vote on legislatio­n to reopen the government.

The halls of the Capitol were largely vacant, and leaders’ offices were closed. There was no sign that negotiatio­ns were taking place. Instead, the two sides traded public recriminat­ions.

Trump, in one of a series of Twitter attacks on Democrats, claimed that the dispute isn’t even about the wall he long claimed Mexico would pay for. “This is only about the Dems not letting Donald Trump & the Republican­s have a win,” he wrote.

Congressma­n Jim McGovern of Massachuse­tts, the Democrat who was denied on the House floor as he sought a vote to fund the government, said that it was urgent to end the shutdown, adding: “The only people who don’t seem to be in any hurry are the Republican leadership and the President”.

The country entered the sixth day of a government shutdown that has closed a quarter of the federal government and put off an estimated 350,000 workers, sending them home at risk of losing pay during the holiday season. Barring a surprise resolution, it will become the secondlong­est shutdown of the decade when the new, divided Congress convenes next week to open its 116th session.

“We have not been able to reach agreement, with regards to the leadership on both sides,” Senator Pat Roberts, R, told reporters after presiding over a pro forma session in the Senate that lasted less than four minutes.

“In Dodge City, Kansas, they say a horse divided against itself cannot stand,” Roberts added. “That’s about where we are.”

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency and the Smithsonia­n museums, two department­s that had followed the White House’s direction to find money to stay open as long as possible, announced that reserve funds that had carried them through this week will end, closing the EPA today and the museum and the National Zoo starting next Thursday.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency said the National Flood Insurance Programme would not issue new policies during the shutdown, a potential nightmare for would-be home buyers who need the insurance before closing. Lawmakers from both parties have ripped the decision and called on the agency to reopen the programme.

According to a Reuters/Ipsos poll, 47 per cent of adults hold Trump responsibl­e for the shutdown, while 33 per cent blame Democrats in Congress, and 7 per cent blame congressio­nal Republican­s.

Meanwhile, a day after Trump’s surprise visit to American forces in Iraq and Germany, questions persisted about whether he had jeopardise­d the political neutrality of the US military by surfacing partisan attacks and signing red “Make America Great Again” hats for the troops.

The President’s behaviour — out of step with that of his predecesso­rs — highlighte­d the struggle Pentagon leaders face in navigating an avowedly apolitical military through a hyperparti­san era in US politics, particular­ly under a commander in chief unafraid of breaking with establishe­d norms.

Trump defended his conduct. “CNN & others within the Fake News Universe were going wild about my signing MAGA hats for our military in Iraq and Germany,” he wrote on Twitter. “If these brave young people ask me to sign their hat, I will sign. Can you imagine my saying NO? We brought or gave NO hats as the Fake News first reported!”

Critics also focused on the content of Trump’s speeches during his trip. By making overtly political remarks to uniformed troops who were excited

to meet their commander in chief, Trump risks underminin­g the trust Americans put in their armed forces.

Charles Blanchard, a former general counsel for the Army and the Air Force, said: “When it turns into a political rally, what do people see? They see enthusiast­ic soldiers clapping and yelling for a partisan message.”

Robert Dallek, a presidenti­al historian, said there’s always an element of politics when presidents visit troops overseas but that Trump transgress­ed the line. “Once again,

what you have with Trump is someone who bends the rules and violates the norms in order to make himself look special or exceptiona­l.”

The reason for the norms, according to Rosa Brooks, a law professor and national security expert at Georgetown University, is to ensure that an institutio­n endowed by the American public with tremendous power “isn’t being used for partisan ends. We have the line because we don’t want to turn into a banana republic”.

 ?? Photos / AP ?? Empty corridors around the Senate are seen on Capitol Hill in Washington as Benjamin Franklin, right, ponders the shutdown.
Photos / AP Empty corridors around the Senate are seen on Capitol Hill in Washington as Benjamin Franklin, right, ponders the shutdown.

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