Chattanooga Times Free Press

Schumer takes back wall offer in new push

- BY ANDREW TAYLOR AND JILL COLVIN

WASHINGTON — Top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer on Tuesday pulled back an offer of $25 billion for President Donald Trump’s long-promised southern border wall, as lawmakers scrambled to figure out how to push a deal to protect 700,000 or more so-called Dreamer immigrants from deportatio­n.

Schumer had made the offer last Friday in a lastditch effort to head off a government shutdown, then came scalding criticism from his party’s liberal activist base that Democrats had given up too easily in reopening the government without more concrete promises on immigratio­n.

“We’re going to have to start on a new basis, and the wall offer’s off the table,” Schumer, D-N.Y., told reporters Tuesday.

The shutdown battle — settled mostly on Trump’s terms — complicate­d the already difficult search for an immigratio­n pact: GOP hard-liners appeared emboldened, while Democrats absorbed withering criticism from progressiv­es. Neither developmen­t seemed likely to push the combatants toward the compromise­s needed to produce a bill that can pass both the tea party-driven House and the more pragmatic Senate.

Still, there were fresh signs of a willingnes­s to keep hunting for a solution, with a flurry of meetings on Capitol Hill and an assessment from White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders that “I don’t think they’re that far apart.”

Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said he’d been to three meetings Tuesday about immigratio­n. “I know there’s a lot of skepticism around here and not much trust,” he said, “but I do believe that there is a bona fide bipartisan concern about getting this done.”

Even if the Senate can come up with the votes to pass a plan, Democrats fear there is little chance such a bill would gain the support of House Republican­s.

“There were no commitment­s made in the House” as legislator­s worked to end the government shutdown, House GOP Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana said Monday, warning against any “amnesty” measure.

Trump weighed in Tuesday via Twitter: “Nobody knows for sure that the Republican­s & Democrats will be able to reach a deal on DACA by February 8, but everyone will be trying…. with a big additional focus put on Military Strength and Border Security. The Dems have just learned that a Shutdown is not the answer!”

Cornyn, the No. 2 Senate Republican, said Schumer had promised a $25 billion figure for the wall and other border security measures, though not all of that would have been immediate funding. He called Schumer’s withdrawal of the offer “a step backward.”

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