Albuquerque Journal

U.S. budget summit set for Thursday

Lack of agreement could cause partial shutdown

- BY ALAN FRAM AND ANDREW TAYLOR ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump and congressio­nal leaders have scheduled a summit to begin sorting out their budget difference­s, top lawmakers and the White House said Monday, as a clash that could produce a partial government shutdown by the weekend hung in the balance.

The meeting, set for Thursday at the White House, comes just a day before federal spending expires that’s needed to keep agencies functionin­g beyond midnight Friday night. Complicati­ng the search for a pact are disputes over immigratio­n, health and other issues folded into the year-end mix.

Top Republican­s have wanted to push a bill through Congress this week keeping government afloat through Dec. 22, giving bargainers more time to seek a longer-term budget pact. But underscori­ng the balancing act leaders face, the hard-right House Freedom Caucus flexed their muscle late Monday and demanded that the temporary spending bill run until Dec. 30.

The conservati­ves said they worry that a vote on the spending measure before Christmas — when lawmakers are desperate to get home — would give Democrats more leverage to boost the package’s price tag. In a brief drama, around two dozen of them withheld votes for a procedural measure advancing the GOP’s prized, separate tax bill until House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., agreed to talk to them further about their concerns, said Freedom Caucus chairman Mark Meadows, R-N.C.

The GOP will need Democratic votes to push the spending bills through Congress, another reason the pathway is unclear for averting a closure just weeks before the start of the 2018 election year. Even so, top Republican­s expressed confidence that they’d approve the short-term measure this week, with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., saying, “We will pass it before the end of the week.”

Hours before Trump and Capitol Hill leaders were to hold a budget meeting last Tuesday, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., abruptly called off the session. The cancellati­on came after Trump took to Twitter to vilify their stances on taxes, immigratio­n and crime and say he saw no prospects for an agreement, and the standoff has exacerbate­d bitter feelings on both sides.

“We hope the president will go into this meeting with an open mind, rather than deciding that an agreement can’t be reached beforehand,” the Democrats said Monday in a written statement.

The two Democrats pointedly said they’d accepted Trump’s offer to meet with them. And in what seemed an attempt to isolate the president, they said they hoped he’d be amenable to an agreement “as negotiatio­ns with our Republican counterpar­ts continue.”

With the budget chafing under spending caps imposed by a 2011 bipartisan budget deal, Democrats want defense and domestic programs to get equal funding increases. Both sides say they want to provide money for a health insurance program that serves more than 8 million children and for states battered by recent storms.

Democrats and some Republican­s are also demanding a plan to protect immigrants who arrived illegally in the U.S. as children.

Trump scuttled a program from President Barack Obama’s administra­tion that protected them from deportatio­n, and he gave Congress until March to work out a new agreement. Trump expressed a desire to work with Democrats to extend that program, called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, but he and Republican­s want border protection money in return and there have been no signs of progress.

Getting an immigratio­n deal enacted in December would cause an eruption in House GOP ranks, where many conservati­ves oppose the idea.

GOP leaders hope to send Trump a final tax package before Christmas.

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