The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

TRUMP SIGNS $1.3 TRILLION BUDGET

- By Jill Colvin, Catherine Lucey, Lisa Mascaro and Alan Fram Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump signed a $1.3 trillion spending measure Friday, averting a midnight government shutdown just hours after declaring he was considerin­g a veto.

Trump said he was “very disappoint­ed” in the package, in part because it did not fully fund his plans for a border wall with Mexico and did not address some 700,000 “Dreamer” immigrants who are now protected from deportatio­n under a program that he has moved to eliminate.

But Trump praised the increases the bill provides for military spending and said he had “no choice but to fund our military”

“My highest duty is to keep America safe,” he said.

The bill signing came a few hours after Trump created last-minute drama by saying in a tweet that he was “considerin­g” a veto.

With Congress already on recess, and a government shutdown looming, he said that young immigrants now protected in the U.S. under Barack Obama’s Delayed Action for Childhood Arrivals “have been totally abandoned by the Democrats (not even mentioned in Bill) and the BORDER WALL, which is desperatel­y needed for our National Defense, is not

fully funded.”

Trump’s veto threat was at odds with top members of his administra­tion and House Speaker Paul Ryan, who had said Thursday that he was supportive of the measure. The White House also issued a formal statement of administra­tion policy indicating Trump would sign the bill. Several advisers inside and outside the White House said earlier Friday that they suspected the tweet was just Trump blowing off steam.

Finally, in made-for-TV scheduling, Trump took to twitter again to announce he’d be holding a news conference to talk about the bill. The drama was shortlived: An aide told reporters the signing was on. And telegraphi­ng the outcome, an internal television feed advertised its next program: “President Trump Participat­es

in a Bill Signing.”

Asked why he’d made the threat, Trump said he’d “looked very seriously at the veto,” but “because of the incredible gains that we’ve been able to make for the military that overrode any of our thinking.”

Trump also warned Congress: “I will never sign another bill like this again.”

The will-he, won’t-he episode came hours after the Senate early Friday morning passed the $1.3 trillion spending package aimed at keeping the government open past midnight.

Trump has been increasing­ly frustrated with media coverage of the bill, spurred on by conservati­ve Republican lawmakers and other critics who had spent recent days calling the president, inciting him, and making their cases loudly on cable news shows Trump is known to watch.

Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., chairman of the House Freedom Caucus and a friend of the president, said in a tweet that the group would “fully support” a veto, adding that Congress should pass a shortterm budget resolution while Trump and congressio­nal leaders “negotiate a better deal for the forgotten men and women of America.”

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 ?? GABRIELLA DEMCZUK/NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Donald Trump (right), with Vice President Mike Pence (center) and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, places his hand on the $1.3 trillion spending bill that he signed Friday in the White House.
GABRIELLA DEMCZUK/NEW YORK TIMES President Donald Trump (right), with Vice President Mike Pence (center) and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, places his hand on the $1.3 trillion spending bill that he signed Friday in the White House.

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