Manila Bulletin

Partial US government shutdown set to last through Christmas

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WASHINGTON (AFP) – The partial US government shutdown is set to stretch on through Christmas as Congress adjourned Saturday with no deal in sight to end the impasse over funding for Donald Trump's wall on the US-Mexico border.

Due to the shutdown – which saw several key US agencies cease operations at 12:01 a.m. (0501 GMT) Saturday – Trump said that he would remain in Washington over Christmas instead of going to Florida.

''I am in the White House, working hard,'' the Republican president tweeted Saturday morning. ''We are negotiatin­g with the Democrats on desperatel­y needed Border Security (Gangs, Drugs, Human Traffickin­g & more) but it could be a long stay.''

Trump has dug in on his demand for $5 billion for constructi­on of the wall on the US border with Mexico. Democrats are staunchly opposed, and the absence of an elusive deal meant federal funds for dozens of agencies lapsed at midnight Friday.

The House of Representa­tives and the Senate held sessions on Saturday, but both chambers adjourned without a deal being reached, and no votes were expected until December 27.

Top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer blasted the president and blamed him for provoking the shutdown: ''President Trump, if you want to open the government abandon the wall, plain and simple.''

''The Trump shutdown isn't over border security; it's because President Trump is demanding billions of dollars for an expensive, ineffectiv­e wall that the majority of Americans don't support.''

Most critical US security functions remain operationa­l, but 800,000 federal workers are impacted, with many furloughed just days before Christmas while others deemed essential are working unpaid.

And as many other Americans and tourists began their end-of-the year holidays, some national parks have shuttered completely, while others remain open but without any visitor services including restrooms and maintenanc­e.

New York's governor provided funding to the Statue of Liberty monument and Ellis Island so those key attraction­s could remain open.

It remains unclear how long the shutdown will last, with Washington unable to accomplish one of its most basic tasks – keeping the government up and running.

''This is a derelictio­n of duty by Congress and the president,'' said David Cox, national president of the American Federation of Government Employees.

Trump's own Republican party still controls both the House and Senate, but in January the House comes under Democratic control.

Governor Ralph Northam of Virginia – a state bordering the US capital that is home to many federal workers – urged Trump in a letter Saturday to push immediate action to end the shutdown, saying it ''inflicts real harm'' on workers.

''I share your desire for strong economic growth throughout the United States, but the current partial government shutdown makes it harder to achieve this goal,'' the Democratic governor said.

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