The Arizona Republic

Put up or shut down?

Trump’s demands could make bipartisan accord more difficult

- Erin Kelly

With Congress returning Monday with five days left to avert a government shutdown, President Donald Trump adds pressure by demanding funding for a border wall.

Congress returns WASHINGTON Monday with just five days left to keep the government from shutting down, and President Trump is adding to the pressure by demanding money for a Southwest border wall and other controvers­ial programs that threaten a bipartisan deal.

Lawmakers passed a stopgap spending bill in December to fund federal agencies through midnight Friday. Congressio­nal leaders are scrambling to reach a bipartisan compromise on new legislatio­n to keep the money flowing through fiscal 2017, which ends on Sept. 30.

They may pass a short-term measure to keep the government funded for a few days or weeks past Friday’s deadline to give themselves more time to negotiate.

“We’re making great progress on funding the government, avoiding a shutdown,” Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said in a recent interview with the USA TODAY Network, referring to Senate and House leaders of both parties. “Our worry is that the president will come in and insist on certain things that couldn’t get the support of everybody.”

Among Trump’s demands that could derail Democratic support for a deal: $1.4 billion to begin building a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border, $18 billion in cuts to domestic programs, stripping funds from Planned Parenthood and allowing states to stop federal grants from going to “sanctuary cities” that protect some undocument­ed immigrants from deportatio­n.

However, Democrats may support at least some of the approximat­ely $30 billion that Trump wants to add for defense programs and combat operations.

White House budget director Mick Mulvaney said Thursday that the shutdown fight is “the first real test of whether or not the Democrats — specifical­ly in the Senate — are interested in negotiatin­g, interested in compromisi­ng.”

Speaking at an event orga-

nized by the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance, Mulvaney said the short-term spending bill is “ripe for some kind of negotiated agreement that gives the president some of his priorities and the Democrats some of their priorities. And we think we have opened the door for that.”

The Republican majority needs Democratic votes in both the House and Senate to pass the government funding bill. In the Senate, the GOP has a slim majority of 52 seats in a chamber where 60 votes are required to pass the legislatio­n. In the House, Republican leaders will need help from Democrats because some conservati­ves will oppose any bill that increases spending.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said the spending bill “obviously is one that cannot be done by one party alone.”

Schumer said he and McConnell are working well together on the bill, prompting Schumer to tell Mulvaney: “Let us alone and we can get this done.”

However, Mulvaney has warned Congress that lawmakers must include Trump’s priorities if they want the president to sign the bill.

“The president has to sign off on this stuff, so the president gets to have his say,” Mulvaney said in a recent interview with WBT radio in Charlotte.

SPARRING OVER ACA

The feud between Trump and Democrats on the Affordable Care Act also is spilling over into the negotiatio­ns.

Democrats are pushing to add a provision to the government funding bill to ensure that federal subsidies owed to health insurance companies under Obamacare are paid so that insurance premiums don’t go up for low-income families. Trump has threatened to withhold the payments to force Democrats to bargain on a health care bill to replace the Affordable Care Act.

Leaders of the House and Senate Appropriat­ions committees crafting the spending bill have been relatively tight-lipped about what the legislatio­n will contain and exactly when it will be introduced. They also would not say whether they are considerin­g another stop-gap bill to fund the government for a few extra days or weeks to give them more time to complete a spending package that lasts through September.

“Negotiatio­ns on policy items and funding levels continue,” said Jennifer Hing, communicat­ions director for the House Appropriat­ions Committee. “We expect to have a product prior to the deadline next week.”

Senate Appropriat­ions Chairman Thad Cochran, R-Miss., “will continue to work with the administra­tion and congressio­nal leaders in both parties to resolve outstandin­g issues and enact funding legislatio­n by April 28,” said Stephen Worley, spokesman for the Senate panel.

Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., who serves on the House Appropriat­ions Committee, said he is judging requests for funding by whether they will add votes for the bill and prevent a shutdown. If they don’t, he doesn’t want to see them included even if he personally supports them, Cole told reporters before Congress adjourned for a two-week recess for Passover and Easter.

“For most of this bill, there is agreement,” Cole said. “If we start having people — whether it’s the administra­tion or this or that group within our own (Republican) conference — that decide they have to have this or that ... I don’t think whatever the potential gain is, is worth the gamble.”

SUPPORT FOR MINERS

One possible addition to the bill that could help increase bipartisan support, Cole said, is a proposal to extend health care benefits and pension programs for coal miners, who will lose their health benefits at the end of this month unless Congress acts. Miners are seeking a permanent fix for the programs rather than just another temporary extension.

That plan has bipartisan support from senators and House members who represent coal states such as Kentucky, West Virginia and Pennsylvan­ia.

However, Trump’s border wall “is a lot trickier,” Cole said.

“The powers that be, both in leadership and at the other end of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue (in the White House), need to not give us demands that simply can’t be met,” he said.

“The president has to sign off on this stuff, so the president gets to have his say.” Mick Mulvaney, Director, Office of Management and Budget

 ?? ZACH GIBSON, GETTY IMAGES ?? Rep. Tom Cole, an Oklahoma Republican who serves on the House Appropriat­ions Committee, says he opposes any requests that would erode bipartisan support.
ZACH GIBSON, GETTY IMAGES Rep. Tom Cole, an Oklahoma Republican who serves on the House Appropriat­ions Committee, says he opposes any requests that would erode bipartisan support.

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