China Daily (Hong Kong)

Democrats dismissive of Trump’s trade-off

- JOE RAEDLE / GETTY IMAGES

WASHINGTON — In a bid to break the shutdown stalemate, US President Donald Trump offered to extend temporary protection­s for young people brought to the US illegally as children and those fleeing disaster zones in exchange for his long-promised border wall. But while Trump cast the move as a “common-sense compromise”, Democrats were quick to dismiss it as a “non-starter”.

With polls showing a majority of US citizens blaming him and Republican­s for the impasse, Trump said from the White House that he was there “to break the logjam and provide Congress with a path forward to end the government shutdown and solve the crisis on the southern border”.

Hoping to put pressure on Democrats, the White House billed the announceme­nt as a major step forward. But Trump did not budge on his $5.7 billion demand for the wall and, in essence, offered to temporaril­y rollback some of his own hawkish immigratio­n actions — actions that have been blocked by federal courts.

Following a week marked by his pointed clashes with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, it was not clear if Trump’s offer would lead to serious steps to reopen the government, shut for a record 29 days. Trump’s move came as hundreds of thousands of federal workers go without paychecks, with many enduring financial hardship. Many public services are unavailabl­e to US citizens during the closure.

Democrats dismissed Trump’s proposal even before his formal remarks. Pelosi said the expected offer was nothing more than “a compilatio­n of several previously rejected initiative­s” and that the effort could not pass the House

“What is original in the President’s proposal is not good. What is good in the proposal is not original,” she later tweeted.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer also panned the proposal as “more hostage taking,” saying that it was Trump who had “singlehand­edly” imperiled the future of the immigrants he proposed to help.

The New York Democrat said there is only “one way out” of the shutdown. “Open up the government, Mr. President, and then Democrats and Republican­s can have a civil discussion and come up with bipartisan solutions.” he said.

Democrats made their own move late Friday to try to break the impasse when they pledged to provide hundreds of millions of dollars more for border security. But Trump, who has yet to acknowledg­e that offer, laid out his own plan.

Seeking to cast the plan as a bipartisan way forward, Trump said on Saturday he was incorporat­ing ideas from “rank-and-file” Democrats, as top Democrats made clear they had not been consulted. He also said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell would bring the legislatio­n to a vote this week.

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