Starkville Daily News

Government ‘needs a good shutdown,’ frustrated Trump tweets

- By KEN THOMAS, ANDREW TAYLOR

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump declared Tuesday the U.S. government “needs a good shutdown” to fix a “mess” in the Senate, signaling on Twitter his displeasur­e with a bill to keep operations running. But Republican leaders and Trump himself also praised the stopgap measure as a major accomplish­ment and a sign of his masterful negotiatin­g with Democrats.

On the defensive, Trump and his allies issued a flurry of contradict­ory statements ahead of key votes in Congress on a $1.1 trillion spending bill to keep the government at full speed through September. After advocating for a future shutdown, the president hailed the budget agreement as a boost for the military, border security and other top priorities.

“This is what winning looks like,” Trump said during a ceremony honoring the Air Force Academy football team. “Our Republican team had its own victory — under the radar,” Trump said, calling the bill “a clear win for the American people.”

Yet Trump’s morning tweets hardly signaled a win and came after Democrats gleefully claimed victory in denying him much of his wish list despite being the minority party. They sounded a note of defeat, blaming Senate rules for a budget plan that merited closing most government operations.

But the White House then rallied to make the case to the public — and perhaps to a president who famously hates losing — that he actually had prevailed in the negotiatio­ns. Budget Director Mick Mulvaney briefed reporters twice within a few hours to adamantly declare the administra­tion’s success. He was joined at his second briefing by Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly. And Trump himself used the normally non-political football ceremony to proclaim his own success.

Mulvaney, criticizin­g Democrats for celebratin­g, said Trump was “frustrated with the fact that he negotiated in good faith with the Democrats and they went out and tried to spike the football to make him look bad.”

Asked how the president would define a “good shutdown,” Mulvaney suggested that “if you wanted to imagine what a good shutdown was, it would be one that fixes this town.”

Trump’s embrace of such a disruptive event came days after he accused Senate Democrats of seeking that same outcome and obstructin­g majority Republican­s during budget negotiatio­ns.

Lawmakers announced Sunday they had reached an agreement to avoid a shutdown until Oct. 1 — a deal that does not include several provisions sought by Trump, including money for a border wall.

It also came at the start of a week in which the House is considerin­g a possible vote on a health care overhaul that would repeal and replace Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act.

The spending bill is set for a House vote on Wednesday, when it’s likely to win widespread bipartisan support, though a host of GOP conservati­ves will oppose the measure, calling it a missed opportunit­y.

House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin defended the package, calling it an “important first step in the right direction” that included a “big down payment” on border security and the military. And Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said the bill “delivers some important conservati­ve wins.”

In fact, the White House on Monday had praised the deal as a win for the nation’s military, health benefits for coal miners and other Trump priorities.

But by Tuesday morning, the president sounded off on Twitter. “The reason for the plan negotiated between the Republican­s and Democrats is that we need 60 votes in the Senate which are not there!” He added that we “either elect more Republican Senators in 2018 or change the rules now to 51 (percent). Our country needs a good ‘shutdown’ in September to fix mess!”

That contradict­ed Trump’s message of less than a week ago.

Last Thursday, Trump had tweeted that Democrats were threatenin­g to close national parks as part of the negotiatio­ns “and shut down the government. Terrible!” He also tweeted at the time that he had promised to “rebuild our military and secure our border. Democrats want to shut down the government. Politics!”

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