Vancouver Sun

U.S. senators scramble for deal

Stopgap measure slated for vote on Monday

- KEVIN FREKING, ANDREW TAYLOR AND ALAN FRAM

WASHINGTON • Senate moderates in both parties expressed hopes of finding a way out of the government shutdown mess Sunday as their leadership engaged in unrelentin­g finger-pointing over who was to blame for stalemate.

Lawmakers on Capitol Hill said they were pursuing a deal to reopen the government before the start of the workweek Monday.

In exchange for Democratic votes, GOP leadership would agree to address immigratio­n policy and other pressing legislativ­e matters in the coming weeks. Nothing has been agreed to, the lawmakers said, and there were no indication­s that leaders of either party or the White House was on board.

A stopgap spending measure was slated for a vote on Monday after midnight.

Delaware Democratic Sen. Chris Coons said there would not be a vote on immigratio­n tied to reopening the government as part of a deal. But, he said, “there would be an agreement that we would proceed to immigratio­n with a broad understand­ing of what that is.”

The approach found advocates in South Carolina Sen. Lindsay Graham and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, both Republican­s.

Graham urged Democrats to take the deal. “To my Democratic friends, don’t overplay your hand,” he told reporters. “A government shutdown is not a good way to get an outcome legislativ­ely. We learned that as Republican­s.”

Chuck Schumer, the Senate’s top Democrat, indicated earlier Sunday that he would continue to lead a filibuster of the stopgap spending measure, while congressio­nal Republican­s appeared content to let the pressure build on the second day of the government shutdown.

Senate Democrats blocked a temporary government­wide funding bill Friday night, demanding progress on legislatio­n to protect about 700,000 so-called Dreamer immigrants who were brought illegally to the country as children.

Absent a breakthrou­gh, the vote early Monday will prove to be a test of unity among Democrats, who have wagered shutting down the government to push the immigratio­n question. Five Democrats from states won by President Donald Trump broke ranks in a vote Friday. The measure gained 50 votes to proceed to 49 against, but 60 were needed to break a Democratic filibuster.

The president took to Twitter on Sunday morning to call on the GOP-controlled Senate to consider deploying the “nuclear option” — changing Senate rules to end the filibuster — and reopen the government with a simple majority. But Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell rejected that notion.

 ?? DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A protester takes part in the Women’s March in London on Sunday as part of a global day of protests, a year to the day since Donald Trump took office as U.S. president. Thousands rallied in European, Australian and U.S. cities, a day after similar...
DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A protester takes part in the Women’s March in London on Sunday as part of a global day of protests, a year to the day since Donald Trump took office as U.S. president. Thousands rallied in European, Australian and U.S. cities, a day after similar...

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