San Francisco Chronicle

Shutdown concerns ease as progress seen in talks

- By Emily Cochrane and Annie Karni Emily Cochrane and Annie Karni are New York Times writers.

WASHINGTON — Faced with limited options and a looming deadline to prevent another government shutdown, President Trump is moving toward accepting a border-security deal that would fall well short of his once-firm demand for $5.7 billion in funds for a wall at the southweste­rn frontier.

On Capitol Hill, House and Senate conferees were nearing an agreement that could offer the president between $1.3 billion and around $2 billion in funding for border security, a range, still subject to change, that could include some physical barriers and result in a deal as early as Monday. Talk of a wall has given way to “bollard fencing” and strategic placements.

“We’re 95 to 98 percent done,” said Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee.

Trump has told allies he would grudgingly accept a figure of around $2 billion, but House Democrats remain publicly opposed to spending that much on physical barriers. It is still not clear how much of the final allocation would go for new fencing, according to three people briefed on the negotiatio­ns.

The effort to find some final figure between the House Democrats’ $1.3 billion and a figure slightly higher than $2 billion marks an end game of sorts for high-stakes negotiatio­ns aimed at making sure the government does not, once again, close down next weekend.

But the final agreement still has contentiou­s wrinkles to iron out.

While Democrats want as low a number as they can secure, members of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, which had earlier pushed Trump to take an uncompromi­sing line on wall funding, met with him Thursday and indicated that any number even slightly above $2 billion would satisfy them for now.

Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, told senators at a party lunch and in private conversati­ons over the past few days that Trump had told him, “I can live with $2 billion,” according to a Senate aide who witnessed one of the exchanges.

 ?? Gregory Bull / Associated Press ?? A section of border wall separates Tijuana, Mexico (left), from San Diego. House and Senate negotiator­s were nearing a deal on border security funding.
Gregory Bull / Associated Press A section of border wall separates Tijuana, Mexico (left), from San Diego. House and Senate negotiator­s were nearing a deal on border security funding.

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