New York Daily News

EMPEROR AS TRUMP SPEWS, THE NEWS SAYS: HAS NO CLOSE

Exposed as having no plan after boasting, ‘I’d love a shutdown’

- BY DENIS SLATTERY

PRESIDENT TRUMP would “love” to see another government shutdown if he doesn’t get his way on immigratio­n legislatio­n.

“If we don’t change it, let’s have a shutdown, we’ll do a shutdown, and it’s worth it for our country,” Trump said on Tuesday following a White House roundtable about MS-13 gang violence.

“I would love to see a shutdown if we don’t get this stuff taken care of.”

Trump wants $25 billion for border security, including money to build a wall along the southern border — which he had once promised to make Mexico pay for.

He also wants to curb legal immigratio­n by restrictin­g the relatives that legal immigrants can sponsor for citizenshi­p and ending a lottery that distribute­s visas to people from a diverse group of countries.

Trump blasted the “stupidity” of current U.S. immigratio­n law.

In exchange, Trump promised to protect nearly 700,000 young Dreamer immigrants who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children, plus another 1.1 million undocument­ed immigrants. Rep. Pete King (R-L.I.), who attended the White House meeting, said he doesn’t think the government will shutdown over immigratio­n policy, despite Trump’s comments. “I don’t see that in the offing,” he said. The White House tried to walk back the President’s comments a short time later. “We are not advocating for the shutdown, that’s the fault of the Democrats not being able to do their jobs,” press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said Trump’s shutdown threat “speaks for itself.” “We had one Trump shutdown, nobody wants another, maybe except him,” he said. Trump had referred to that brief January standoff as “the Schumer shutdown.” Democrats, who have balked at Trump’s hard-line immigratio­n proposals, are working with Republican­s on a budget that will fund the government for two years. They plan to tackle immigratio­n afterwards. Trump, who set off the current immigratio­n deadlock by ending the

Obama-era program last year and shot down a bipartisan proposal on Monday, is not likely to extend the March 5 deadline when work permits expire.

A court case has allowed it to keep running for now.

White House chief of staff John Kelly (photo inset, facing page) said Tuesday that the undocument­ed Dreamers wouldn’t be priorities for deportatio­n.

Disagreeme­nts over the fate of recipients of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program led to a three-day government shutdown last month.

The short-term spending bill approved at the time runs out on Thursday.

House Republican leaders, meanwhile, passed a bill Tuesday night that would keep the government open for another six weeks by adding a year’s worth of Pentagon funding to another stopgap spending bill.

But Schumer said that approach won’t pass the Senate, where leaders were closing in on a larger, long-term deal.

“There are still some outstandin­g issues to be resolved, but we are closer to an agreement than we have ever been,” Schumer announced on the Senate floor after meeting with Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.).

“I think we’re on the way to getting an agreement and getting it very soon,” McConnell said.

The pair spoke shortly before Trump issued his surprise shutdown call.

Trump’s comments drew an instant rebuke from lawmakers, including one of the Republican­s attending the round-table event.

“We don’t need a government shutdown on this,” Rep. Barbara Comstock (R-Va.), whose district in the Washington suburbs is home to many federal workers, told Trump.

Both parties want to resolve the issues, she added.

“You can say what you want — we are not getting support of the Democrats,” Trump shot back.

The possibilit­y of another shutdown had many whose livelihood­s depend on the federal government on edge.

“It’s just incredibly difficult, not only for federal agencies, but for scientists and others to work with all of this uncertaint­y,” Andrew Rosenberg, director of the Center for Science and Democracy at the Union of Concerned Scientists, told the Daily News. “There’s a lot that just can’t be done without knowing when grants will be approved.”

Rosenberg said he was disappoint­ed by Trump’s threats to shutter the government again.

“He’s supposed to be leading the government,” he said.

“Even if they decide to have another short term spending bill, it only adds to the uncertaint­y,” he added.

“Day to day, it just seems like the parks are closed, but it really degrades the ability for all of the agencies to do what they are meant to be doing in the long term.”

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 ??  ?? President Trump’s professed longing for a new government shutdown hasn’t made it any easier for Senate leaders Chuck Schumer (right) and Mitch McConnell (far right) to get a budget deal done and address immigratio­n.
President Trump’s professed longing for a new government shutdown hasn’t made it any easier for Senate leaders Chuck Schumer (right) and Mitch McConnell (far right) to get a budget deal done and address immigratio­n.
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