The Herald (South Africa)

Tentative deal to scale wall issue

● US lawmakers await approval on reduced amount as Trump crusades in El Paso

- Richard Cowan

US congressio­nal negotiator­s on Tuesday were hopeful lawmakers would pass a deal to avert another partial government shutdown, even as it remained unclear whether Republican President Donald Trump would back an agreement containing funds for border security but not a wall.

“I am cautiously optimistic that we will get this through,” Democratic Representa­tive Nita Lowey, who chairs the House Appropriat­ions Committee, told CNN in an interview early on Tuesday after news of the tentative pact broke late on Monday.

“We cannot shut the government down.”

Asked if Trump had signalled support for the bipartisan deal, Lowey did not answer directly but said it had the backing of US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other Democrats, who control the lower chamber.

On Monday, Republican Senator Richard Shelby said the congressio­nal committee charged by Trump to address border security and government funding had agreed in principle to pay for border security programmes through to September 30.

Lawmakers want to avoid repeating the recent 35-day government shutdown that shuttered key agencies, roiled financial markets and left hundreds of thousands of federal workers and contractor­s without pay.

They face a Saturday deadline to find a solution before current funding expires again.

Trump’s demand for $5.7bn (R78.5bn) to fund a wall along the nation’s southern border with Mexico triggered the previous shutdown in late December despite fellow Republican­s holding both the Senate and the House of Representa­tives.

By late January, the president backed down and agreed to reopen the roughly onequarter of the government that had closed and called for a congressio­nal committee to hammer out a plan.

Any agreement now must pass a House controlled by Democrats, who took over the chamber in January.

Congressio­nal aides said on Monday the latest deal did not contain $5.7bn for Trump’s long-promised wall, a cornerston­e of his presidenti­al campaign that he had said would be paid for by Mexico and not by US taxpayers.

A final agreement is expected by late on Wednesday.

Congressio­nal sources said it will include $1.37bn (R18.9bn) for new fencing along 90km of the southern border but only with current designs, such as “steel bollard” fencing. It will also address immigrant detention beds.

Still, it was unclear if Trump would sign the measure into law given its backing from congressio­nal Republican­s, or side with vocal conservati­ve commentato­rs who have the president’s ear such as Sean Hannity of Fox News, who called it a “garbage compromise”.

Democrats oppose the wall but support border security.

Trump has threatened to declare a national emergency if Congress does not give him wall money.

“Just so you know – we’re building the wall anyway,” Trump said at a rally in the border city of El Paso, Texas.

Beto O’Rourke, the former Democratic congressma­n from Texas considerin­g a 2020 White House run, accused Trump at a counter-rally nearby of stoking false fear about immigrants and telling “lies” about O’Rourke’s hometown of El Paso.

 ??  ?? DONALD TRUMP
DONALD TRUMP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa