Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Trump to take ‘serious look’

President plays coy on border deal — but still claims victory

- By Jill Colvin, Alan Fram and Catherine Lucey

WASHINGTON — Even before seeing a final deal or agreeing to sign it, President Donald Trump labored on Wednesday to frame the congressio­nal agreement on border security as a political win, never mind that it contains only a fraction of the billions for a “great, powerful wall” that he’s been demanding for months.

Trump is expected to grudgingly accept the agreement, which would avert another government shutdown and give him what Republican­s have been describing as a “down payment” on his signature campaign pledge.

He said Wednesday that he’s still waiting on lawmakers to present him with final legislativ­e language before making a decision. But he’s not waiting to declare victory, contending at the White House on Wednesday that a wall “is being built as we speak.”

Work on a first barrier extension — 14 miles in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley — starts this month, approved by Congress a year ago along with money to renovate and strengthen some existing fencing.

But that’s a far cry from the vast wall he promised during his campaign that would “go up so fast your head will spin.”

He told a law enforcemen­t group Wednesday,

“It’s going to be a great, powerful wall. The wall is very, very on its way.”

White House officials cautioned that they had yet to see final legislativ­e language, which was still being worked out Wednesday.

Trump has a history of balking at deals after signaling he was on board. But barring any major changes or late additions, he was expected to acquiesce, according to White House officials and other Republican­s close to the White House who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly.

Trump and his aides have also signaled that he is preparing to use executive action to try to secure additional money for the wall by tapping existing federal dollars

without any congressio­nal sign-off so he can show supporters he’s continuing to fight. That could lead to resistance in Congress or federal court.

But assuming there are no surprises in the final text, “I think he’s going to sign it,” conservati­ve Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., a close ally of the president, said Wednesday.

He warned, though, that “it would be political suicide” if Trump signed the deal and then failed to take action to secure additional funding for the wall using his executive powers.

Swallowing the deal would mark a major concession by Trump, who has spent months insisting the situation at the southern border represents a national security crisis that demands

an impregnabl­e wall.

He also had insisted he would accept nothing less than $5.7 billion for the barrier — a demand that forced the 35-day partial shutdown that left hundreds of thousands of federal workers without paychecks and Republican­s taking the brunt of the blame. There is no appetite for a repeat.

The tentative deal lawmakers reached this week would provide less than $1.4 billion for border barriers while keeping the government funded through the end of September. While some conservati­ves, Fox News commentato­r Sean Hannity among them, have balked at the deal, other allies of the president have urged him to sign it and move on.

In private conversati­ons since the deal was first announced, Trump has complained, calling the committee members poor negotiator­s, said a person familiar with the conversati­ons who was not authorized to speak publicly.

He has also made clear that he wanted more money for the wall and has expressed concern the plan is being framed as a defeat for him in the media.

There is little doubt the deal will pass Congress, barring 11th-hour surprises, with “no” votes most likely coming from liberal Democrats and conservati­ve Republican­s.

Democratic leaders are selling it as solid compromise that will keep the government open.

At a Cabinet meeting Tuesday, Trump said he wasn’t “thrilled” or happy with the deal, but made clear that, if he does sign the legislatio­n, he is considerin­g supplement­ing it by moving money from what he described as less important areas of government.

The White House has been laying the groundwork for Trump to use executive action to bypass Congress and divert money into wall constructi­on. He could declare a national emergency or invoke other executive authority to tap funds including money set aside for military constructi­on, disaster relief and counterdru­g efforts.

Democrats and Republican­s on the Hill were trying on Wednesday to put the final touches on the legislativ­e text, while working through several snags, including whether to include a simple extension of the Violence Against Women Act as Senate Republican­s want or move a new, longerterm bill separately, as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is pushing.

Democrats were also pressing to make sure employees of federal contractor­s got back pay for wages lost during the last shutdown — something Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., said was a no-go for the president.

The haggling meant a House vote won’t come before Thursday night at the earliest.

Trump told reporters he would be taking “a very serious look” at the final text once the White House receives it.

Lawmakers need to pass some kind of funding bill by midnight Friday to avoid another shutdown.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP ?? President Trump tells a law enforcemen­t group, “It’s going to be a great, powerful wall. The wall is very, very on its way.”
SUSAN WALSH/AP President Trump tells a law enforcemen­t group, “It’s going to be a great, powerful wall. The wall is very, very on its way.”

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