USA TODAY US Edition

Shutdown parks Trump largely on the sidelines

This dealmaking rests in hands of Congress

- Gregory Korte

WASHINGTON – On the first day of a 16-day government shutdown in 2013, President Obama appeared in the Rose Garden to accuse Republican­s of taking “the entire economy hostage over ideologica­l demands.”

On the weekend of the first shutdown of his presidency, President Trump did much the same thing — but on Twitter. “Democrats are holding our Military hostage over their desire to have unchecked illegal immigratio­n,” he wrote. “Can’t let that happen!”

The party in the White House has changed, and the debates are different. But Trump is learning, like Obama did, that he can’t sign a bill that’s not on his desk, and there’s no executive order that can keep the government open without congressio­nal approval.

Instead, two days into what may be the biggest domestic crisis of his presi- dency, Trump remained largely on the sidelines watching a legislativ­e process on Capitol Hill from 16 blocks away. Instead of a weekend victory lap to celebrate the one-year anniversar­y of his inaugurati­on with friends and supporters, he hasn’t been seen publicly since the shutdown started Saturday morning just after midnight.

He canceled a planned weekend trip to his Mar-a-Lago resort, where a $100,000-per-couple fundraiser went on without him, and he hasn’t left the White House since Thursday. Trump’s last public remarks — other than on

Twitter — were in a speech to antiaborti­on protesters Friday that made no mention of the shutdown.

Since then, the only glimpse of the president came in three photos taken by an official White House photograph­er and released by the press office. (One showed him at the Resolute Desk, wearing a “Make America Great Again” hat and holding a phone to his ear and looking directly at the camera.)

Instead, it was Vice President Pence, half a world away on a Middle East tour, speaking to the troops and to the American people about what the shutdown means.

“Despite bipartisan support for a budget resolution, a minority in the Senate has decided to play politics with military pay. But you deserve better,” Pence told members of the 332nd Air Expedition­ary Wing at an undisclose­d military base near Syria.

It wasn’t exactly the approach Trump himself had in mind when he criticized Obama’s handling of the shutdown in 2013.

“You have to get everybody in a room. You have to be a leader. The president has to lead,” Trump told Fox News then. Obama, he said, “has never been a dealmaker.”

Trump came to office without political experience but with a decadeslon­g career in real estate. His governing treatise was encapsulat­ed in his 1987 book, The Art of the Deal.

White House aides insisted Sunday that he was dealing behind the scenes. “The president is engaged in finding out what are the impacts of this,” White House legislativ­e director Marc Short told NBC’s Meet the Press. “He’s been on the phone in trying to find a resolution to it. And he had members that were to the White House just a week ago in a bipartisan, bicameral fashion to try to get past this impasse.”

In one tweet Sunday, Trump suggested that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell invoke the “nuclear option” — changing the rules of the Senate in order to bypass a filibuster by Minority Leader Charles Schumer. But even McConnell’s office suggested Trump’s advice wasn’t helpful.

On Sunday, Trump spoke to House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy and Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn — both Republican­s. Chief of Staff John Kelly and Short made phone calls to other lawmakers, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said.

McConnell said senators will vote at noon Monday on a bill that would fund the government through Feb. 8. It was unclear late Sunday whether there were enough votes for a breakthrou­gh.

Republican senators, in their own way, seemed to urge Trump to stay out of the way and let the Senate work out a deal. A bill to keep the government open though Feb. 16 already has passed in the House but is being blocked by Senate Democrats who want it to include some provision giving legal status of undocument­ed immigrants who entered the United States illegally as children.

“Someone’s got to lead, and I think the Senate is the perfect body to do that,” said Sen. Lindsay Graham, R-S.C.

Graham, who has become a regular Trump golf partner even as he has tried to pull the president to the center on immigratio­n, suggested Sunday that Trump has not been well served by White House staffers on the issue. He singled out Stephen Miller, the domestic policy adviser who has been a leading voice for reducing both legal and illegal immigratio­n.

“I’ve talked with the president. I think his heart is right on this issue,” Graham said. “As long as Stephen Miller is in charge of negotiatin­g immigratio­n, we’re going nowhere.”

“The Senate is an institutio­n of its own, and I think we should proceed based on what we believe is the best route forward.” Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine on Trump’s role in forging a compromise

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