Arab Times

Congress pushes border security bill

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WASHINGTON, Feb 14, (RTRS): The US Congress on Thursday aimed to end a dispute over border security with legislatio­n that would ignore President Donald Trump’s request for $5.7 billion to help build a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border but avoid a partial government shutdown.

Late on Wednesday, negotiator­s put the finishing touches on legislatio­n to fund the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) through Sept 30, the end of the fiscal year, along with a range of other federal agencies.

Racing against a Friday midnight deadline, when operating funds expire for the agencies that employ about 800,000 workers at the DHS, the department­s of Agricultur­e, Commerce, Justice and others, the Senate and House of Representa­tives aimed to pass the legislatio­n later on Thursday.

That would give Trump time to review the measure and sign it into law before temporary funding for about one-quarter of the government expires.

Failure to do so would shutter many government programs, from national parks maintenanc­e and air traffic controller training programs to the collection and publicatio­n of important data for financial markets, for the second time this year.

“This agreement denies funding for President Trump’s border wall and includes several key measures to make our immigratio­n system more humane,” House Appropriat­ions Committee Chairwoman Nita Lowey, a Democrat, said in a statement.

According to congressio­nal aides, the final version of legislatio­n would give the Trump administra­tion $1.37 billion in new money to help build 55 miles (88.5 km) of new physical barriers on the southwest border, far less than what Trump had been demanding.

It is the same level of funding Congress appropriat­ed for border security measures last year, including barriers but not concrete walls.

Since he ran for office in 2016, Trump has been demanding billions of dollars to build a wall on the southwest border, saying “crisis” conditions required a quick response to stop the flow of illegal drugs and undocument­ed immigrants, largely from Central America.

He originally said Mexico would pay for a 2,000-mile (3,200-km) concrete wall – an idea that Mexico dismissed.

Trump has not yet said whether he would sign the legislatio­n into law if the Democratic-controlled House of Representa­tives and Republican-led Senate approve it, even as many of his fellow Republican­s in Congress were urging him to do so.

Instead, he said on Wednesday he would hold off on a decision until he examines the final version of legislatio­n.

But Trump, widely blamed for a five-week shutdown that ended in January, said he did not want to see federal agencies close again because of fighting over funds for the wall.

Senator Richard Shelby, the Republican negotiator who is chairman of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee, said in a Twitter post he spoke to Trump later on Wednesday and he was in good spirits. Shelby told Trump the agreement was “a downpaymen­t on his border wall.”

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, who is in regular contact with the White House, said Trump was “inclined to take the deal and move on.”

But Graham also told reporters that Trump would then look elsewhere to find more money to build a border wall and was “very inclined” to declare a national emergency to secure the funds for the project.

Such a move likely would spark a court battle, as it is Congress and not the president that mainly decides how federal funds get spent.

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