Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Must have wall funding to ink deal, Trump says

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

WASHINGTON — As lawmakers from both parties rushed to reach a compromise on immigratio­n, President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he’s not backing down on funding a border wall.

“It’s got to include the wall,” Trump said Wednesday at a news conference where he was asked if he would sign immigratio­n legislatio­n that didn’t provide money to begin building a physical barrier on the U.S.-Mexico border. “Security is No. 1, so the answer is you have to have the wall.”

Lawmakers involved in the negotiatio­ns shuttled between the House and Senate

seeking accord on legislatio­n that would give protection against deportatio­n to about 800,000 young illegal aliens who were brought to the U.S. as children, while also meeting Trump’s conditions of tighter border security, restrictio­ns on family prefer

in immigratio­n and an end to a diversity visa lottery.

Some lawmakers hope an immigratio­n agreement could open the way to a broad spending bill, which in turn could carry disaster relief funds, legislatio­n stabilizin­g the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and other measures that stalled in December.

A group of more than 100 chief executives, including Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, Mary Barra of General Motors Co., Apple Inc.’s Tim Cook and Accenture North America’s Julie Sweet, joined in the push by Democrats to pass a deal by the end of next week. They wrote to the Republican and Democratic leaders and urged them to “act immediatel­y” to let young people given protection under President Barack Obama administra­tion’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program remain in the country.

“It is critical that Congress act to pass legislatio­n before January 19th,” the letter says. “In addition to causing a tremendous upheaval in the lives of deferred-action employees, failure to act in time will lead to businesses losing valuable talent, cause disruption­s in the workforce, and will result in significan­t costs.”

Democrats have been insisting that any immigratio­n compromise be part of a spending deal, which is needed to keep the government open after Jan. 19. Lawmakers also haven’t reached a consensus on border security and the other terms set by Trump, while a group of conservati­ve Republican­s in the House were pushing for a deal with tighter restrictio­ns on immigratio­n.

While Trump has never wavered in his demand to build the wall, he told a group of lawmakers from both parties at the White House on Tuesday that he’d go along with whatever they hammer out.

“I will be signing it,” Trump told them. “I’m not going to say, ‘Oh, gee, I want this or I want that.’”

Meanwhile, Republican and Democratic leaders sought to dispel concerns that a late Tuesday ruling by a federal judge in San Francisco temporaril­y blocking Trump’s decision to terminate the deferred-action initiative would hold back the effort to write the program into the law. The program is to end March 5.

Senate Democratic leader Charles Schumer of New York said on the Senate floor Wednesday that the court decision “in no way diminishes the urgency of resolving the [deferred-action] issue.”

Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the No. 2 Senate Republican, agreed, telling reporters that he’s determined to help set up a timetable for further bipartisan negotiatio­ns that will also involve top administra­tion officials.

“My sense is that it doesn’t change the need for us to act, so we’re going forward,” Cornyn said.

The administra­tion on Wednesday vowed to request a stay and appeal of the court’s deferred-action ruling. The president denounced the federal courts as “broken and unfair.”

“It just shows everyone how broken and unfair our Court System is when the opposing side in a case (such as DACA) always runs to the 9th Circuit and almost always wins before being reversed by higher courts,” Trump wrote in a tweet, referring to the program by its initials.

The White House suggested the court’s ruling would make a legislativ­e deal harder to obtain.

“We find this decision to be outrageous,” White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement. “An issue of this magnitude must go through the normal legislativ­e process.”

In announcing in September his intent to end the program, which he viewed as abuse of executive power, Trump also pushed Congress to develop a legislativ­e fix, speaking favorably of the young immigrants and suggesting he did not necessaril­y want them to be deported.

On Wednesday afternoon, the No. 2 lawmakers in both the House and Senate touched gloves, deputized for action at what appeared to be an opportunit­y to break Washington gridlock.

“Everybody wants to find a deal there, myself included,” said Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., chairman of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus. “It better be good, because that particular issue is really one of the issues that got this president elected. He can’t afford to make a mistake.”

Conservati­ve columnist and author Ann Coulter warned Trump after he struck a conciliato­ry chord on immigratio­n at the Tuesday White House meeting.

“As he considers the utility of walls (and promises), realDonald­Trump should consider that ‘Never Trump’ was toothless, but ‘Former Trump’ will bite,” Coulter wrote on Twitter.

REPUBLICAN­S RESPOND

Inside the Capitol among the GOP rank and file, most seem to be either supportive of the negotiatio­ns or taking a wait-and-see approach.

It’s no secret that the results of the bipartisan, leadership-driven negotiatio­ns are likely to produce results that anger the hard right, but less strident Republican­s seem to be comfortabl­e, at least so far.

“I think most like where it’s going,” said freshman Rep. Don Bacon of Nebraska, who represents a competitiv­e district anchored by Omaha and is sympatheti­c to deferred-action beneficiar­ies. “There’s some exceptions, but there’s a general consensus that that is what we need to be doing. And I think that this is an area that’s tailor-made for a bipartisan solution. We both want some things here.”

Immigratio­n is just one side of the equation. Also at stake is a deal on spending that would uncork tens of billions of dollars in higher Pentagon spending this year alone, along with money sought by Democrats for domestic programs.

Democratic votes are needed to advance such legislatio­n, but top Democrats including Schumer won’t agree to a budget deal unless the deferred-action program is dealt with first.

Republican­s had long fought perception­s that the two issues were tied together, but they’re dropping that pretense now.

“When it comes to how conservati­ves react to the notion that these things are being linked in discussion­s, it’s sort of nothing new,” said Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla. “I think a lot of folks want to see the final product, but I haven’t heard some wide-scale revolt to the fact that people are having discussion­s.”

Conservati­ves in the thinktank world said they were heartened that the negotiatio­ns had broadened to socalled chain migration and an immigratio­n lottery that’s aimed at promoting diversity.

“I think that for some people, yesterday was a bit of a shock to see just how eager [Trump] is to pass amnesty,” said Roy Beck, executive director of NumbersUSA, which advocates for reduced immigratio­n rates. “We were worried that the wall was going to be the big get. … I think we’re thrilled to be in as good a shape as we’re in.”

Still, frustratio­n is brewing that Republican­s aren’t doing better after winning control of the White House and Congress in 2016.

“Somehow Chuck Schumer still gets to dictate, ‘Oh, I get $60 billion more in nondefense spending, and I get to determine … [Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals],’” said Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio. “How does that make any sense?”

Meanwhile, a group of House Republican­s, led by Judiciary Committee Chairman Robert Goodlatte of Virginia, unveiled their own immigratio­n bill Wednesday, a measure that embraces conservati­ve goals but would seem to have little chance of ultimate passage.

It would reduce legal immigratio­n levels by 25 percent, block federal grants to so-called sanctuary cities that don’t cooperate with federal authoritie­s on immigratio­n issues, and restrict the number of relatives that immigrants already in the U.S. can bring here.

 ?? AP/MANUEL BALCE CENETA ?? “We need the wall,” President Donald Trump said Wednesday about his plans to limit illegal immigratio­n. He also expressed doubt about being interviewe­d by special counsel Robert Mueller’s team on possible election interferen­ce by Russia, insisting...
AP/MANUEL BALCE CENETA “We need the wall,” President Donald Trump said Wednesday about his plans to limit illegal immigratio­n. He also expressed doubt about being interviewe­d by special counsel Robert Mueller’s team on possible election interferen­ce by Russia, insisting...
 ?? AP/JACQUELYN MARTIN ?? Judiciary Committee Chairman Robert Goodlatte (right) and Rep. Raul Labrador, the panel’s border security subcommitt­ee chairman, leave a news conference Wednesday after unveiling a House immigratio­n bill that would cut legal immigratio­n by 25 percent,...
AP/JACQUELYN MARTIN Judiciary Committee Chairman Robert Goodlatte (right) and Rep. Raul Labrador, the panel’s border security subcommitt­ee chairman, leave a news conference Wednesday after unveiling a House immigratio­n bill that would cut legal immigratio­n by 25 percent,...

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