Los Angeles Times

Trump, Democrats plan a do-over

The president is again set to meet rival party leaders, whose help he will need on a year-end budget deal.

- By Lisa Mascaro lisa.mascaro@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — After railing against Democrats for weeks and pushing a sweeping tax plan over their objections, President Trump reached out to the rivals — a subtle acknowledg­ment that he’ll need their help to avert a government shutdown at the end of the week.

Trump invited congressio­nal leaders to the White House on Thursday for discussion­s on a year-end budget deal, a do-over after Democrats backed out of an earlier meeting when the president tweeted shortly beforehand that he saw “no deal” to be made.

Trump had little choice but to soften his approach. Because many Republican lawmakers refuse to vote for almost any new spending bill, Trump needs Democrats to provide what House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) calls “the currency of the realm” — the votes needed to approve a bill to keep government running.

That gives Democrats, who are the minority, a powerful negotiatin­g hand in talks at the White House. In exchange, Democrats want concession­s from Trump, particular­ly an immigratio­n deal to protect young “Dreamers” from deportatio­n as the White House phases out the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, that allows them to legally work and remain in the U.S.

“We’re glad the White House has reached out and asked for a second meeting,” Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) said in a statement. “We hope the president will go into this meeting with an open mind, rather than deciding that an agreement can’t be reached beforehand.”

Congress often makes a year-end sprint through its legislativ­e to-do list, but this year’s pile-up is particular­ly daunting as lawmakers race to finish complicate­d business before the holidays.

For Republican­s, the top priority is to pass their $1.5trillion tax plan, accomplish­ing a major campaign promise before Christmas.

The House was set to appoint members of a conference committee to begin reconcilin­g the tax bills approved by the House and Senate into a final product, which will probably be voted on next week.

But first Congress must deal with Friday’s deadline to fund the government.

Leaders are lining up a stopgap measure to provide money for two weeks while budget negotiatio­ns continue. That would push the deadline to Dec. 22.

The temporary funding measure will also include a short-term extension of the Children’s Health Insurance Program, which helps cover working families who earn too much to qualify for Medicaid. States have been left in the lurch when CHIP expired Oct. 1 at the start of the new fiscal year.

Democrats have a long priority list for negotiatio­ns, but at the top is the push for a solution for the 700,000 Dreamers, who were children when their parents brought them illegally into the country.

Trump once sided with Pelosi and Schumer on this issue, but has since shifted his views. Leading Democrats, including Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), have warned that without a bill to help Dreamers they would withhold their votes on the government funding bills, essentiall­y threatenin­g a shutdown.

Arguments for the immigrants were boosted Monday when the inf luential U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the business organizati­on largely aligned with Republican­s, urged Congress to find a solution by year’s end or risk workplace disruption­s as Dreamers are deported.

“We are passionate about this issue because it is a matter of principle and fairness,” Chamber Chief Executive Thomas Donohue said. “The longer Congress waits, the more Dreamers will lose their ability to work here legally and become subject to immediate deportatio­n. This will cause serious disruption­s in the business operations of the companies that employ them, which is why many business leaders have spoken out and demanded action on this issue.”

Republican­s, though, are pushing for an immigratio­n deal that would include border security and reductions in legal immigratio­n. They say the issue can wait until next year because Trump’s decision doesn’t end the program until March 8.

On Monday, Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) called Democratic threats to shut down the government over Dreamers “a hysterical and cynical ploy.” He also said talks to resolve the issue had hit an impasse.

Other issues are also expected to be wrapped up in the year-end deal, including supplement­al disaster aid after the devastatio­n wrought by hurricanes and the ongoing Western wildfire season. California lawmakers objected because the White House’s latest, $44billion disaster funding request failed to include money for wildfire aid.

The budget negotiatio­ns are needed because Congress failed to fully fund the government at the start of the fiscal year in October.

A core dispute is the topline funding level for government operations. Many Republican­s want to increase funding for the military but not for non-defense accounts, while Democrats are pushing for parity.

Without a deal, funding would automatica­lly be reduced to so-called sequester levels — steep cuts across the board, stemming from a 2011 budget deal — that only the most fiscally conservati­ve deficit hawks support.

 ?? Alex Wong Getty Images ?? DEMOCRATS Nancy Pelosi and Charles E. Schumer are expected to seek an immigratio­n deal to protect “Dreamers” when they meet with President Trump this week in talks to avoid a government shutdown.
Alex Wong Getty Images DEMOCRATS Nancy Pelosi and Charles E. Schumer are expected to seek an immigratio­n deal to protect “Dreamers” when they meet with President Trump this week in talks to avoid a government shutdown.

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