Call & Times

Battle over border security could result in partial shutdown

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The fight over President Donald Trump’s $5 billion wall funds deepened Monday, threatenin­g a partial government shutdown in a standoff that has become increasing­ly common in Washington.

It wasn’t always like this, with Congress and the White House at a crisis over government funding. The House and Senate used to pass annual appropriat­ion bills, and the president signed them into law. But in recent years the shutdown scenario has become so routine that it raises the question: Have shutdowns as a negotiatin­g tool lost their punch?

Monday brought few signs of progress. A partial shutdown that could occur at midnight Friday risks disrupting government operations and leaving hundreds of thousands of federal employees furloughed or working without pay over the holiday season. Costs would be likely in the billions of dollars.

Trump was meeting with his team and getting regular updates, said White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders. Trump was also tweeting Monday to keep up the pressure.

Exiting a Senate Republican leadership meeting late Monday, Sen. John Thune of South Dakota said, “It looks like it probably is going to have to build for a few days here before there’s a solution.”

The president is insisting on $5 billion for the wall along the southern border with Mexico, but Senate Democrats are blocking the measure.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Trump talk most days, but the senator’s spokesman would not confirm if they spoke Monday about a plan.

McConnell opened the chamber hoping for a “bipartisan collaborat­ive spirit” that would enable Congress to finish its work.

“We need to make a substantia­l investment in the integrity of our border,” McConnell said. “And we need to close out the year’s appropriat­ion process.”

Meanwhile more than 800,000 non-essential government workers are preparing for the uncertaint­y ahead.

About half the workers would be forced to continue working without immediate pay. Others would be sent home. Congress usually approves their pay retroactiv­ely, even if they stayed home and didn’t work.

Many agencies, including the Pentagon and the department­s of Veterans Affairs and Health and Human Services, are already funded for the year and will continue to operate as usual, regardless of whether Congress and the president reach agreement this week.

Congress already approved funding this year for about 75 percent of the government’s discretion­ary account for the budget year that began Oct. 1.

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