Orlando Sentinel

Oval Office clash over wall

Shutdown looms as President Trump, Democrats bicker about funding

- By Matthew Daly and Catherine Lucey

WASHINGTON — In an Oval Office confrontat­ion, President Donald Trump heatedly threatened to shut down the federal government Tuesday as he and Democratic leaders bickered over funding for his promised border wall.

Trump and House and Senate Democratic leaders Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer squabbled for more than 15 minutes in the televised encounter. Each of them interrupte­d the others to question facts, quibble over election results and lob insults.

Trump questioned Pelosi’s ability to count votes in her own House. She questioned his manhood — after she left the building.

The public clash marked Trump’s first meeting with the newly empowered Democrats since their midterm victories that put them in control of the House, laying bare the tensions on both sides and suggesting how divided government might work — or not — as the 2020 presidenti­al election nears.

Neither the public nor the private face-to-face portion of the meeting appeared to resolve the wall-funding dispute with a partial shutdown looming on Dec. 21. However, Pelosi said Trump called her later in the afternoon and told her the White House was looking at options she and Schumer had laid out.

Trump sounded more determined than ever to allow a partial government shutdown unless he gets the billions he wants for his long-promised wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

“I will take the mantle. I will be the one to shut it down,” he declared.

Pelosi later said that she and Schumer had goaded the president to “fully own that the shutdown was his.” She told Democratic lawmakers back at the Capitol, according to an aide who was in the room, that the wall was “like a manhood thing for him as if manhood could ever be associated with him. This wall thing.”

The aide was not authorized to speak publicly and commented only on condition of anonymity.

While Trump has suggested he may be willing to trade with Democrats and has publicly praised Pelosi, he was focused Tuesday on reinforcin­g his hardline immigratio­n promises, repeatedly stressing border security and the wall as a critical part. Democrats were in no mood to sympathize, emphasizin­g their

newfound political strength.

“Elections have consequenc­es, Mr. President,” Schumer said.

Trump later called it a “friendly meeting,” saying “I’ve actually liked them for a long period of time and I respect them both. And we made a lot of progress.” The Democrats said they had given Trump two options to keep government open and the responsibi­lity lay with him and Republican­s who control Congress.

The wall remains the main sticking point in talks. Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan acknowledg­ed Tuesday that the GOP-led House has yet to pass legislatio­n that includes the $5 billion in border wall funds that Trump has been requesting. Ryan likely lacks sufficient votes from Republican­s who will lose their majority at the end of the month.

Trump is seeking far more for his long-stalled border wall than the $1.6 billion the Senate has agreed to for border security, including physical barriers and technology along the border.

Should the two sides not make a deal by Dec. 21, about three-quarters of the government would continue to have enough money to operate. But department­s affected absent a deal include Homeland Security, Transporta­tion, Agricultur­e, State and Justice, as well as national parks.

Both sides came into the negotiatin­g session primed for battle. After a few niceties, Trump dug into Democrats on the border wall, prompting a stern rebuke from Schumer that the issue at hand was “called funding the government.” Trump soon started scrapping with Pelosi, when she said there should not be a “Trump shutdown.”

“Did you say Trump?” the president said, as the two argued over whether Trump had enough Republican votes in the House to support his border wall plan.

“The fact is that you do not have the votes in the House,” Pelosi declared.

Trump shot back, “Nancy, I do.”

Also in a fighting mood, Schumer accused Trump of threatenin­g a shutdown “because you can’t get your way.”

Trump heckled Schumer over a previous shutdown, saying “the last time you shut it down you got killed” politicall­y.

Pelosi and Schumer both repeatedly asked to make the conversati­on private, without success, as Trump argued that the public meeting was a good thing: “It’s called transparen­cy.”

Trump repeatedly returned to his argument that the border wall is needed for security reasons. He also argued that “tremendous” portions of the wall have already been built. In fact, some barrier renovation has happened, but little wall constructi­on has been completed under Trump.

Vice President Mike Pence, a former House member, sat silently as Trump and the two Democrats bickered. He later called the meeting a “good discussion.” Asked to describe the atmosphere in the private meeting that followed the public quarrel, Pence said, “candid.”

Pelosi and Schumer have urged Trump to support a measure that includes a half-dozen government funding bills largely agreed upon by lawmakers, along with a separate measure that would fund the Department of Homeland Security at current levels through Sept. 30, the end of the fiscal year. The homeland bill includes $1.3 billion for fencing and other security measures at the border.

If Trump rejects that, Democrats are urging a continuing resolution that would fund the remaining appropriat­ions bills at current levels through Sept. 30.

“We gave the president two options that would keep the government open,” Pelosi and Schumer said in a statement after the meeting. “It’s his choice to accept one of those options or shut the government down.”

 ?? MARK WILSON/GETTY ?? Rep. Nancy Pelosi, Vice President Mike Pence, President Donald Trump and Sen. Chuck Schumer in the Oval Office on Tuesday.
MARK WILSON/GETTY Rep. Nancy Pelosi, Vice President Mike Pence, President Donald Trump and Sen. Chuck Schumer in the Oval Office on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States