Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

$5B sought for border wall

- By Erica Werner

House Republican­s are setting up for a potential showdown with the Senate.

WASHINGTON—House Republican­s are aiming to meet President Donald Trump’s latest request for his border wall, setting up a potential showdown with the Senate.

The $5 billion requested for 2019 would be included in a House Homeland Security spending bill expected to be released Wednesday. The Senate included only $1.6 billion for the wall in its version of the bill last month, a figure that displeased Trump, who told senators he might shutdown the government this fall if he doesn’t get more.

Administra­tion officials and House Republican­s are holding ongoing discussion­s about the precise figure and what the money would be spent on. Trump never formally requested $5 billion for the wall, instead communicat­ing the number privately to lawmakers in recent weeks.

Rep. Charles Fleischman­n, R-Tenn., a member of the Appropriat­ions Committee’s subcommitt­ee on Homeland Security, said he anticipate­d $5 billion that would be allocated for “wall plus” — meaning physical barriers in some spots, as well as other security mechanisms in places along the 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border where a wall might not be practical.

He and other Republican­s acknowledg­ed it might be a struggle to get their number through the Senate. Members of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee have been writing their spending bills on a bipartisan basis this year, while House Republican­s are proceeding on their own.

“It’s got to start somewhere, and if we start in the House and get that out there, it gives us a starting point,” Fleischman­n said. “You’ll at least have the House and the White House lined up.”

Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y., top Democrat on the Appropriat­ions Committee, said the $5 billion figure was a non-starter given numerous other needs to be met in areas such as education and health care.

“That number is unacceptab­le,” Lowey said.

Republican lawmakers hope to avoid a government shutdown. Current funding bills are set to expire Sept. 30, just ahead of the November midterm elections where the GOP will try to keep control of Congress.

Thorny issues such as wall funding and an unrelated fight over spending on veterans may remain unresolved at that point, and lawmakers widely expect that Congress will have to pass a short-term funding extension to keep the government running through Election Day.

During his presidenti­al campaign, Trump repeatedly promised that Mexico would pay for a wall along the border, but thus far that has not happened.

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