Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Chances grow for shutdown

GOP turns to stopgap as Dems push their agenda

- By Mike DeBonis, Ed O’Keefe and Sean Sullivan

The GOP may be turning to stopgap measures to keep government running, as Democratic leaders say they won’t back a deal that does not protect “Dreamers.”

WASHINGTON — Chances of a government shutdown grew Monday as Republican­s concluded that they would be unable to pass a long-term spending bill by the Friday deadline. GOP leaders are now turning to a short-term funding measure in hopes of keeping agencies open while talks continue, but Democratic leaders say they are unlikely to support any deal that does not protect young people brought to the U.S. illegally.

Aides to key negotiator­s from both parties planned to meet Tuesday in an effort to rekindle budget talks, setting up a Wednesday meeting of the leaders themselves. If they cannot agree, the government would shut down at midnight Friday for the first time since 2013.

House Republican leaders are scheduled to discuss their plans for a stopgap spending measure with rank-and-file lawmakers on Tuesday evening.

Hopes of a deal to keep the government open have been complicate­d by lingering mistrust after a meeting last week in which, according to several people familiar with the gathering, President Donald Trump used vulgar terms to describe poor countries sending immigrants to the United States.

The meeting was to consider a bipartisan immigratio­n deal to protect the “Dreamers” — young immigrants brought to the United States illegally as children, including roughly 800,000 enrolled in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program that Trump has canceled. Democratic leaders are demanding protection­s for DACA recipients be part of any spending deal. They have the leverage to do so because Senate Republican­s would need at least nine Democratic votes to support any spending deal. Democrats also want Republican­s to match military spending Trump and many GOP lawmakers are seeking with an equal increase in nondefense funding.

“If they need Democratic votes, the overall legislatio­n needs to meet certain Democratic criteria and be reflective of the values of the Democratic caucus and what we believe are the values of the American people,” said Rep. Joe Crowley, N.Y., the chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, in an interview.

There is also no guarantee that House GOP leaders will be able to rally a majority of their members to support a short-term spending measure, which multiple congressio­nal aides and a senior Trump administra­tion official said would likely last through mid-February.

Defense hawks, in particular, are livid at further delaying a planned boost in military funding. That could mean House Republican­s would also need Democratic votes to pass a short-term deal — something the minority party may not be inclined to provide this time around.

On Capitol Hill, however, there are hopes that tensions will ease as the shutdown deadline approaches.

The government last shut down in October 2013, when Republican­s opposed to Democratic President Barack Obama’s health care law demanded its defunding. Government offices closed and hundreds of thousands of employees were furloughed for two weeks before the GOP relented.

Last week’s meeting went off the rails when Trump angrily rejected a tentative deal negotiated among a small bipartisan group of senators — one that did not include any Republican­s who support the strong restrictio­ns Trump favors.

GOP aides on Capitol Hill believe that the group of four deputy leaders from both chambers of Congress — Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., and House Majority Whip Steny Hoyer, D-Md. — is more likely to produce a workable immigratio­n accord, which would then unlock an agreement on spending.

 ?? ALBA VIGARAY/EPA ?? People gather for a rally against racism Monday in New York, reacting to the president’s remarks on immigrants.
ALBA VIGARAY/EPA People gather for a rally against racism Monday in New York, reacting to the president’s remarks on immigrants.

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