The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Border dispute threatens to shut government again

Funding for vital agencies will soon expire without deal.

- By Jacob Bogage

A dispute over border security funding threatens to force a shutdown of vast swaths of the federal government in less than a week, as Congress and the White House struggled Sunday to reach a deal on long-term spending legislatio­n.

Funding for roughly 70% of the federal government — including the department­s of Defense, State and Homeland Security as well as the IRS and Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion — will expire Saturday just after midnight unless Congress acts before then.

A prolonged shutdown could have cascading effects on the government and economy. Two-thirds of IRS employees would face furloughs at the height of tax filing season. The roughly 1.3 million active-duty U.S. military service members would remain on the job without pay. So would airport security officers, many of whom called in sick in protest during a previous shutdown, sparking nationwide travel delays.

As recently as Friday, congressio­nal negotiator­s were nearing an agreement to complete a spending bill for all those agencies, with the goal of voting on it as soon as Thursday. (Congress has already passed separate legislatio­n funding the other 30% of the government.)

But disagreeme­nts over immigratio­n at the U.S.-Mexico border — an issue that has derailed legislatio­n throughout this Congress and emerged as a key fault line between the parties in the November elections — stymied the talks, according to multiple people involved in the conversati­ons, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private negotiatio­ns.

Amid rising tension, negotiator­s for House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., over the weekend appealed to the White House — rather than congressio­nal Democrats – to engage in spending talks, revealing the fraught nature of the conversati­ons.

GOP negotiator­s were prepared to offer the Department of Homeland Security roughly the same level of funding for the rest of the 2024 fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30, as the department received in fiscal 2023, plus some extra money for immigratio­n enforcemen­t, multiple people said.

But due to inflation, that would represent a significan­t funding cut in real terms.

The White House rejected that proposal, the people said, saying even that amount of money would put the department at a dangerous shortfall.

“Republican­s have always said we will provide all the resources necessary for enforcemen­t, but not a blank check to simply ‘manage’ people into the country and bail out sanctuary cities,” a senior GOP aide said Sunday. “… House Republican­s have repeatedly urged the White House for weeks to engage with congressio­nal Democrats to help address the seriousnes­s of the situation to little avail.”

U.S. Immigratio­n and Cu— toms Enforcemen­t, part of the Department of Homeland Security, is already running short of money even under its current budget.

Last month, it drafted plans to release thousands of immigrants and slash its capacity to hold detainees as it faced rapidly dwindling funding.

More hospitable weather in the spring and summer could draw more border crossings, officials say, straining the agency’s finances even further.

Border issues have complicate­d other funding measures, as well.

President Biden, Johnson and Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) remain at an impasse in conversati­ons about U.S. spending to support Ukraine, talks that have gone awry over attempts to link the money to border security.

 ?? GO NAKAMURA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Disagreeme­nts over immigratio­n at the U.S.-Mexico border have stymied talks between party negotiator­s in Congress.
GO NAKAMURA/THE NEW YORK TIMES Disagreeme­nts over immigratio­n at the U.S.-Mexico border have stymied talks between party negotiator­s in Congress.

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