Albuquerque Journal

Shutdown continues into the workweek

Party leaders negotiatin­g plan that would fund government for 3 weeks

- BY ALAN FRAM, ANDREW TAYLOR AND ZEKE MILLER

WASHINGTON — The government shutdown is set to sow more disruption and political peril today after the Senate inched closer but ultimately fell short of an agreement that would have reopened federal agencies before the beginning of the workweek.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said negotiatio­ns were still underway late into the night, with a vote to break a Democratic filibuster on a short-term funding bill scheduled for 10 a.m. MST today. Under the proposal taking shape, Democrats would agree to a three-week spending measure — until Feb. 8 — in return for a commitment from the Republican leadership in the Senate to address immigratio­n policy and other pressing legislativ­e matters in the coming weeks.

But Democrats appeared to be holding out for a firmer commitment from McConnell. “We have yet to reach an agreement on a path forward,” Schumer said late Sunday.

McConnell’s comments followed hours of behind-the-scenes talks between the leaders and rank-and-file lawmakers over how to end the display of legislativ­e dysfunctio­n, which began Friday at midnight after Democrats blocked a temporary spend-

ing measure. Democrats have sought to use the spending bill to win concession­s, including protection­s for roughly 700,000 younger immigrants brought illegally to the U.S. as children.

Republican­s have appeared increasing­ly confident that Democrats were bearing the brunt of criticism for the shutdown and that they would ultimately buckle. The White House and GOP leaders said they would not negotiate with Democrats on immigratio­n until the government is reopened.

There were indication­s Sunday that Democratic resolve was beginning to waver, with growing worries that a prolonged shutdown could prove to be an electoral headache for the party just as it has grown more confident about prospects in November. Although they initially dug in on a demand for an immigratio­n deal, Democrats had shifted to blaming the shutdown on the incompeten­ce of Republican­s and President Donald Trump.

Trump, who regularly disrupted negotiatio­ns in recent weeks, had been a relatively subdued player in the weekend debate. He has not appeared in public since Friday afternoon. The White House said he was in regular contact with Republican leaders, but he has not reached out to any Democrats, a White House official said.

Sunday morning on Twitter, he called on the GOP-controlled Senate to consider deploying the “nuclear option” — changing Senate rules to end the filibuster — and reopen the government with a simple majority.

McConnell has dismissed that option, saying Republican­s will welcome the filibuster when they return to being the Senate minority. The White House didn’t immediatel­y respond to McConnell’s comments.

Democrats are facing intense pressure from their base to solve the issue over the young immigrants, and they are skeptical of Republican­s’ credibilit­y when offering to take up the issue. Whether Trump would back the emerging plan or any later proposal on immigratio­n is an open question. Even if the Senate voted on an immigratio­n proposal, its prospects in the House would be grim.

Throughout the day there were few outward signs of progress, as lawmakers took turns delivering animated speeches to near empty chambers to explain why the other party is to blame. McConnell and Schumer met off the Senate floor in the early evening, as many in quiet Capitol offices flipped their television screens to playoff football games.

While lawmakers feuded, signs of the shutdown were evident at national parks and in some federal agencies. Social Security and most other safetynet programs were unaffected by the lapse in federal spending authority. Critical government functions continued, with uniformed service members, health inspectors and law enforcemen­t officers set to work without pay.

Lawmakers were mindful that the political stakes would soar this morning, when thousands of federal workers would be told to stay home or, in many cases, work without pay. What was still a weekend burst of Washington dysfunctio­n could spiral into a broader crisis with political consequenc­es in November’s midterm elections.

That threat prompted a bipartisan group of Senate moderates to huddle for a second day Sunday in hopes of crafting a plan to reopen the government. The group was set to meet again this morning.

The emerging approach found advocates in South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, who has been trying to broker an immigratio­n deal, and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, both Republican­s who rejected an earlier short-term proposal. Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake, another previous no-vote, announced he would vote in favor of reopening the government.

Graham said no deal had been reached by the moderate group because Democrats were not yet on board. “To my Democratic friends, don’t overplay your hand,” he told reporters. “A government shutdown is not a good way to get an outcome legislativ­ely.”

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., speaks during a rally in support of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals outside the Capitol Sunday.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., speaks during a rally in support of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals outside the Capitol Sunday.

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