Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump suggests he’ll accept border deal

Statements make second shutdown seem less likely

- By Erica Werner, Sean Sullivan and Damian Paletta

WASHINGTON — The threat of another government shutdown receded Tuesday as lawmakers lined up behind a fragile border security compromise and President Donald Trump predicted that federal agencies would stay open.

Trump did not publicly endorse the bipartisan agreement, which offers just a fraction of the money he’s sought for a U.S.-Mexico border wall. But with a shutdown deadline looming Friday at midnight, the president suggested he might be able to accept the deal, saying he could take other steps to fund his wall.

“Am I happy at first glance? The answer is no, I’m not, I’m not happy,” Trump told reporters around midday at the White House, as he met with Cabinet members.

“It’s not going to do the trick, but I’m adding things to it, and when you add whatever I have to add, it’s all going to happen where we’re going to build a beautiful, big, strong wall,” Trump said.

Hours later, after speaking on the phone with Senate Appropriat­ions Committee Chairman Richard Shelby, R-Ala., Trump offered a more positive take. He praised Shelby in a tweet as hardworkin­g, welcomed increased border security spending in the deal apart from the wall and wrote, “Regardless of Wall money, it is being built as we speak!”

As Trump warmed to the emerg-

ing legislatio­n, the House prepared to vote on it as soon as Wednesday evening, according to Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., and action in the Senate could follow Thursday.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., also briefed Trump, later telling reporters that he hopes to have the president’s support, because “he’s got a pretty good deal here.”

The compromise, which bipartisan negotiator­s struck late Monday after reviving stalled talks, includes $1.375 billion for 55 miles of new fences along the border, short of the $5.7 billion Trump had sought for 234 miles of steel walls.

Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle claimed that as a win — Democrats because the figure agreed to is much lower than Trump’s original request, and Republican­s because it does give Trump the ability to build some new segments of barriers.

The barriers would be targeted for the Rio Grande Valley in Texas, a priority area for the Border Patrol. The deal also includes compromise language on funding immigrant detention by the U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agency.

Some conservati­ves attacked the plan in withering terms, but there was a growing acceptance among others on the right that it was likely to become law.

“I think he will sign it; I think the president will sign it,” said Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., a leader of the conservati­ve Freedom Caucus. “I think he will do so reluctantl­y. And then obviously have to use executive actions to secure our borders.”

It wasn’t clear exactly what executive actions Trump might try to take. One option White House officials have strongly considered is to accept the money Congress appropriat­es for the wall, then take additional steps using executive authority to redirect potentiall­y billions of dollars more.

Trump has threatened to declare a national emergency at the southern border, a move that could allow him to bypass Congress and use the military to build the wall. That idea has run into bipartisan opposition, but some GOP lawmakers offered support for the more limited approach of redirectin­g spending.

Democrats said they would challenge such efforts, but several Republican­s described the money the deal offers for border barriers as a “down payment” that the president could build on.

Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., and others pointed specifical­ly to a military program providing for the constructi­on of roads and fences to block drug smuggling, which Blunt said could offer $881 million for the president’s purposes.

“The defense budget, I’m sure they very likely already have in mind what they’d like to do with that $881 million, but if the president was looking for $881 million that he controls, he can look at what they wanted to do with it and decide if barriers would be a more important use,” Blunt said. “It’s certainly a specifical­ly approved use in drug-traffickin­g areas, and these areas would all fit that definition.”

The developmen­ts came amid abundant signs from lawmakers of both parties that, after living through a recordlong 35-day shutdown that ended late last month, they are eager to finalize a spending agreement that would remove the shutdown threat for the rest of the fiscal year — and allow them to flee Washington for a scheduled congressio­nal recess next week.

The deal under considerat­ion would fund, through Sept. 30, the Homeland Security, State, Agricultur­e and Commerce department­s, along with other agencies large and small, composing about 25 percent of the federal budget controlled by Congress. The remaining federal agencies and department­s, including the Pentagon, have already been funded through Sept. 30 in spending bills passed last year.

The bill was still being written Tuesday night, and lawmakers from both parties were pushing to include a number of favored provisions. Some Democrats wanted to add language that would provide back pay to federal contractor­s who were caught in the middle of the recent shutdown, but it was unclear if lawmakers would be successful in getting the provision included.

“Please Mr. President, nobody got everything they wanted in this bill, but sign it and don’t cause a shutdown,” said Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.

Some 800,000 federal workers, and tens of thousands more contractor­s, went without pay during the last shutdown, and crucial services at airports, food inspection sites, the IRS and elsewhere were jeopardize­d.

The president defended pushing the nation into a record-long shutdown in a failed attempt to force Congress to pay for the wall, but suggested he’d made his point and did not want to repeat the experience.

“I don’t think you’re going to see a shutdown. I wouldn’t want to see a shutdown. If you did have it, it’s the Democrats’ fault,” Trump said. “And I accepted the first one, and I’m proud of what we’ve accomplish­ed because people learned during that shutdown all about the problems coming in from the southern border. I accept it. I’ve always accepted it. But this one, I would never accept it if it happens.”

Although the dispute began over Trump’s wall demands, another flashpoint was the question of how many detention beds can be maintained by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. The deal reached Monday omits a strict new cap Democrats had sought on immigrants detained within the United States — as opposed to at the border.

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