Houston Chronicle

TEXAS: Border wall, children’s health care, federal paychecks, Dreamers all in play

- By Kevin Diaz

WASHINGTON — For Texas, home to some 124,000 Dreamers and nearly 800 miles of the Mexican border, the stakes in Friday’s government shutdown showdown couldn’t have been higher.

In the front lines of the battle over immigratio­n, a slew of lawmakers from the Lone Star State found themselves in the center of the drama, with U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, a Republican leader, serving as a top behind-the-scenes negotiator to avert a shutdown on the first anniversar­y of the Trump presidency.

But a 50-48 Senate vote — a 51st vote for the measure was possible, but the majority leader’s vote had not been announced as of midnight — fell short of the 60 needed to extend the government’s funding past midnight, precipitat­ing the second

shutdown crisis of the past five years.

In the 11th hour, just four Democrats joined in voting for a stop-gap funding measure to keep the government open. Three Republican­s voted no.

According to Cornyn, President Donald Trump turned down Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s request for a four-day extension — until Tuesday — for further talks on immigratio­n.

Cornyn, the Republican whip, immediatel­y bid Schumer to return to the other end of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue.

“No agreement,” Cornyn remarked on Twitter. “Work it out with @SpeakerRya­n and @SenateMajL­dr” — a reference to House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

According to Cornyn, who “implored” Democrats to support a stopgap funding deal until Feb. 16, the paychecks of about 200,000 federal workers in Texas were hanging in the balance. “Paychecks will cease, and services will be disrupted,” he said.

In the final hours of the standoff — a slow-motion game of political chicken — the two sides hardened their respective positions: Republican­s insisting on funding Trump’s border wall, and Democrats holding out for a deal to protect young immigrants from deportatio­n.

The deal the Republican leaders offered Democrats in the end would do neither, pushing off negotiatio­ns for another month, keeping the lights on in Washington for another 30 days — simply setting up a new deadline. As sweeteners to liberals, the stop-gap funding measure would extend the popular Children’s Health Insurance Program for six years; for conservati­ves, it would push back two Obamacare taxes.

Partisan blame game

Final negotiatio­ns devolved into a blame game, and Texans were echoing many of the same points as the national leaders in both parties.

The Woodlands Republican Kevin Brady, in a House floor speech Thursday, chided Democrats for passing on the CHIP and Obamacare tax provisions.

“It’s regrettabl­e because these are bipartisan issues, and politics are shutting this government down,” said Brady, a close ally of Ryan and chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.

Austin Democrat Lloyd Doggett, a member of Brady’s tax-writing committee, pointed the finger back.

“The cause of any government shutdown now will be the same as in the past — Republican intransige­nce,” he said. “If they continue to insist upon an entirely partisan bill that excludes Dreamers, they should not expect Democratic votes. I want the government to remain open for everyone, including our Dreamers.”

Amid the logjam came dire warnings for a government stoppage, which would be the first since Republican­s forced a shutdown in 2013 in an unsuccessf­ul attempt to defund the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare.

“Amid all the squabbles and finger-pointing, congressio­nal leaders should be ashamed of their choice to play political games with the fate of 9 million American kids — 400,000 Texas kids — in the Children’s Health Insurance Program,” said Ann Beeson, executive director of the Center for Public Policy Priorities in Austin.

Under an earlier deal with the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Texas received $135 million to continue the program through February.

Apart from Dreamers and CHIP kids, the people most directly hit by a closure will be the state’s large military population, which can mostly stay on duty but receive no paychecks for the duration of any funding lapse.

Social Security checks can still go out — because they’re not subject to annual appropriat­ions from Congress — but national parks and other tourist sites could be closed unless the White House makes special arrangemen­ts.

Facing the uncertaint­y of which side the voters would blame for a government shutdown, both sides vented their frustratio­n — and calculated the political risks.

After mollifying members of the conservati­ve Freedom Caucus about holding fast on border security and future military spending increases — a sticking point that divided Republican­s — the House voted 230 to 197 Thursday night to approve the onemonth continuing resolution.

In the end, only 11 conservati­ve Republican­s voted against the resolution, none from Texas. Among those voting with the GOP majority was San Antonio Republican Will Hurd, a top Democratic target in a heavily Latino border district in West Texas.

Six Democrats broke with their leaders and voted for the temporary funding measure. Among them was Laredo Democrat Henry Cuellar.

‘Dreamers’ showdown

Cornyn has long advocated for GOP outreach to minorities. But he accused the Democrats of using their leverage to hold the entire government “hostage” for Dreamers, with whom he expressed sympathy.

“These 690,000 young men and women are truly, should be, the subject of our compassion,” Cornyn said Friday evening. “But why would we hold 320 million people hostage?”

Cornyn, like other Republican­s, argued that there was no emergency and there would still be time to negotiate a resolution to the DACA program.

“We have been negotiatin­g in good faith on a solution to the DACA recipients, and we will continue to do so,” he said.

Houston Democrat Sheila Jackson Lee, an outspoken Trump critic, argued that Republican­s, who control the White House and both chambers in Congress, had to take responsibi­lity for any government shutdown.

“This is not a bill,” she said of the temporary funding measure in the House, the fourth since September. “It is an affirmatio­n of the inability of the Republican­s to govern.”

Republican­s countered that the onus should fall on Senate Democrats, who had the power to keep the government open.

Rep. Joe Barton, a Republican from Arlington who supports legislatio­n legalizing Dreamers, expressed bewilderme­nt that Democrats would vote against a funding measure that contained nothing that they opposed.

“Where I come from, you vote for what’s in the bill,” he said, “not what’s not in the bill.”

But in the end, House Democrats rejected the choice between funding the government and a deal-in-the-hand to protect Dreamers. They argued it’s a population that has been under the gun since Sept. 5, when Trump declared that Obama did not have the legal authority to protect them unilateral­ly — kicking the issue over the Congress, where it has remained for five months.

“People who say it’s one or the other present a false choice,” said El Paso congressma­n Beto O’Rourke, the Democrats’ best hope of unseating Texas U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz in 2018. “We can do both.”

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