Houston Chronicle Sunday

Budget blame games persist

Shutdown begins with both sides still firmly divided

- By Thomas Kaplan and Sheryl Gay Stolberg

WASHINGTON — With the federal government one day into a shutdown, the House and Senate reconvened Saturday for a new round of bitter partisan bickering and public posturing that seemed to cloud the path to a resolution despite initial talk of a compromise.

The shutdown unfolded one year to the day after President Donald Trump’s inaugurati­on, and the political peril it risked for both parties was evident as they traded blame for the crisis.

The Senate met for a rare weekend session at noon — less than 11 hours after it adjourned — and an exasperate­d-sounding Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., the majority leader, took the floor. “Well, here we are,” he declared. “Here we are. Day 1 of the Senate Democrats’ government shutdown. We did everything we could to stop them.”

He went on to point a finger at his Democratic counterpar­t, Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, saying that Schumer had created an “unfortunat­e hostage situation and led his party

into this untenable position.”

Schumer, in turn, blamed McConnell and Trump.

“He’s turned blowing up bipartisan agreements into an art form,” Schumer said of the president, adding that “negotiatin­g with President Trump is like negotiatin­g with Jell-O.”

In the House, the proceeding­s at one point were interrupte­d by a dispute over whether a poster of Schumer, placed on an easel as a Republican lawmaker gave a speech denouncing Senate Democrats, was appropriat­e for display on the floor.

The likeliest route for lawmakers to reopen the government is to agree on a stopgap spending measure that stretches longer than the few days that Senate Democrats want, but shorter than the four weeks that the House approved Thursday.

But agreeing on the length of the stopgap bill — essentiall­y, a matter of circling a date on the calendar — is complicate­d by a number of contentiou­s issues that lawmakers have yet to resolve, particular­ly the fate of hundreds of thousands of young immigrants, known as Dreamers, brought to the country illegally as children.

‘Common sense’ compromise?

In an ominous sign for those who had hoped for a quick resolution, Trump’s campaign released an ad Saturday saying that Democrats who stand in the way of cracking down on illegal immigratio­n “will be complicit in every murder committed by illegal immigrants.” And while the government is closed, the White House is taking a firm stance against entertaini­ng immigratio­n demands.

“The president will not negotiate on immigratio­n reform until Democrats stop playing games and reopen the government,” said Sarah Huckabee Sanders, White House press secretary, who late Friday night described Senate Democrats as “obstructio­nist losers.”

McConnell is proposing to shorten the temporary spending bill so that it would expire on Feb. 8 instead of Feb. 16 — an extension of three weeks instead of four. Senate Democrats did not immediatel­y get on board with that idea, but McConnell said he would move ahead with a procedural vote on the proposal at 1 a.m. Monday, unless Democrats allowed it to be held sooner.

A bipartisan group of about 19 lawmakers, who call themselves the Common Sense Coalition, met Saturday afternoon in the office of Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, to forge a compromise. Members said they were working on various proposals to present to McConnell and Schumer, with the hope that they would talk to each other.

“We’re going to have to go back and reassess and try to give people a landing spot, a place where everybody feels like they can save a little face and at the same time move forward with getting government running again,” said Sen. Michael Rounds, R-S.D., who participat­ed.

Several members said they worried that if the shutdown dragged on, people on both sides would dig in, making it harder to come to terms on substantiv­e issues like the fate of the Dreamers.

“There is no defense to what we’re doing,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., who also participat­ed. He added: “I think we look petty. We look that we care more about the party flag than the American flag.”

The shutdown, the first since 2013, took effect after the vast majority of Senate Democrats, as well as a handful of Republican­s, voted to block the spending bill that had passed the House. Earlier Friday, Trump and Schumer had closed in on an agreement, but those talks eventually fell apart, and Schumer later blamed the president for backing away from a possible deal.

To reopen the government, at least a dozen or so Senate Democrats will most likely need to agree to any deal, since 60 votes will be required for the measure to clear the Senate. The House would then have to give its approval as well. House members had been scheduled to leave town Friday for a weeklong recess, but members were advised to remain in Washington, given the possible need to vote on a Senate compromise.

DACA at the middle

After Friday’s midnight deadline came and went, Schumer called for the president to sit down with congressio­nal leaders from both parties to work out a deal that would allow the government to open Monday.

But Republican­s, who moved swiftly to brand the crisis as the “Schumer shutdown,” did not seem eager to make concession­s, and, in effect, reward Democrats for largely opposing the stopgap bill.

“We do some crazy things in Washington, but this is utter madness,” House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said, adding, “Senate Democrats shut down this government, and now Senate Democrats need to open this government back up.”

Trump assailed Democrats on Twitter, pointing to the shutdown as a reason that more Republican­s need to be elected in the midterm elections this year.

“Democrats are far more concerned with Illegal Immigrants than they are with our great Military or Safety at our dangerous Southern Border,” the president wrote. “They could have easily made a deal but decided to play Shutdown politics instead.”

The fate of the Dreamers is central to the standoff between the two parties. In September, Trump moved to end an Obamaera program, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, that shielded those immigrants from deportatio­n. The president gave Congress until early March to come up with a solution, and Democrats are eager to secure a deal that would protect them.

 ?? Andrew Harret / Bloomberg ?? Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., says a deal was reached with President Donald Trump until he backed down, prompting the standoff in the Senate that led to the shutdown.
Andrew Harret / Bloomberg Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., says a deal was reached with President Donald Trump until he backed down, prompting the standoff in the Senate that led to the shutdown.
 ?? Tasos Katopodis / Getty Images ?? Chuck Schumer is bearing the brunt of the blame assigned by Senate Republican­s and President Donald Trump.
Tasos Katopodis / Getty Images Chuck Schumer is bearing the brunt of the blame assigned by Senate Republican­s and President Donald Trump.

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