The New Zealand Herald

Boxed in by border wall

Both sides dig in deeper as Trump storms out of meeting and government shutdown nears three-week mark

- Steve Peoples analysis

There is no easy way out. As the third government shutdown of President Donald Trump’s tenure nears the three-week mark, political pressures on Trump and the Democrats have left little room for compromise in the standoff over funding for a border wall.

Most prominentl­y, Trump’s narrow focus on the desires of his most ardent supporters has him convinced he cannot back off his signature campaign promise without facing backlash. Some powerful Republican allies in Washington and beyond are cheering on his demands for US$5.7 billion ($8.4b) funding for the wall, even if some remain uneasy.

For Democrats, broad public scepticism about Trump’s case for the wall — combined with a driving push from the base to stand up to the President — has assured them they’re on solid ground in refusing to bend.

The looming question is whether the impact of the shutdown on government services and the plight of struggling federal workers force Republican lawmakers to break from the President or compel Democrats to budge.

Until then, the dispute has given both parties a fast first test in the politics of divided government as they try to trade blame, manage their messages and strike a balance between competing political wings.

Each side appeared to have dug in even deeper after a White House meeting between Trump and Democratic leaders yesterday as the economic livelihood­s of some 800,000 federal workers hang in the balance. Trump said he quickly ended the meeting after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi indicated that Democrats would not fund his wall under any circumstan­ces.

Trump, who walked out of the meeting, later tweeted: “I said bye-bye.”

Trump’s focus now is squarely on his conservati­ve base and its support for the wall that came to symbolise his promise for a hardline, unrelentin­g approach to immigratio­n.

“He got elected because of that wall,” said Trump confidant Jerry Falwell jnr, president of the evangelica­l Liberty University. Falwell said he has told Trump he’s doing the right thing. “I don’t think it’ll help him at all if he backs down.”

White House aides largely agree. Officials maintain the issue is a political winner, though they have urged the President to be more aggressive in making his case to the public — and to any wavering Republican lawmakers.

Trump outlined his argument in graphic terms during a prime-time Oval Office address on Wednesday. While several studies suggest that illegal immigratio­n has no impact on crime rates, the President highlighte­d horrific crimes committed by immigrants and suggested his wall was needed to prevent this “crisis”. “How much more American blood must we shed before Congress does its job?” asked Trump, who planned to visit the border today.

The White House has been searching for options — but not one that involves compromise. The Administra­tion has explored the possibilit­y of funding the massive wall without congressio­nal approval by declaring a national emergency or using funds from another department, though such moves would almost certainly trigger a legal challenge and may push some Republican­s in Congress to break.

Trump yesterday acknowledg­ed the political pressure from within his own party not to back down.

“If I did something that was foolish, like gave up on border security, the first ones that would hit me would be my senators — they’d be angry at me. The second ones would be the House. And the third ones would be, frankly, my base and a lot of Republican­s out there and a lot of Democrats that want to see border security,” he told reporters.

Meanwhile, the President’s Republican critics are few and far between.

Vice-President Mike Pence got a standing ovation during a closeddoor meeting of congressio­nal Republican­s on Wednesday after he told them to “stand strong” and cited a C.S. Lewis quote on courage as a virtue.

As many as two dozen Republican­s — a tiny fraction of the 199 Republican­s serving in the House — were expected to join House Democrats this week in passing a bill to start reopening parts of the government.

There were modest signs of discomfort with Trump’s strategy among Senate Republican­s, though few had a pressing political incentive to break with the President given that all but a handful expect easy re-elections in 2020.

Senator John Cornyn called the shutdown “completely unnecessar­y and contrived”. At the same time, newly elected Senator Kevin Cramer was more representa­tive of the mood in his caucus when he said voters back home believe Trump is doing the right thing: “They love him. And they want the wall.”

The GOP support stands in sharp contrast to most Americans, who do not approve of Trump’s job performanc­e. His approval rating has hovered close to 40 per cent or below for much of his presidency. But Trump’s approval within the Republican Party has surged close to 90 per cent.

The sharp divide is reflected in public opinion of the wall.

Overall, 54 per cent of Americans oppose constructi­on of a wall along the Mexican border, according to a Quinnipiac poll released in December. At the same time, 86 per cent of Republican­s backed the proposal.

Those numbers have helped keep Democrats united in opposition.

Meanwhile, Republican pollster Frank Luntz suggested there would be little political price to pay for those associated with the extended government shutdown, which is just days away from becoming the longest in US history — even if most Americans blame Trump and his party. “For most people, their day-today lives are not being affected,” Luntz said.

A frequent Trump critic, he predicted the Republican President would find a way to escape the shutdown as a political winner, even if it appeared unlikely now. “Is he boxed in? I’d say no. He’s the Harry Houdini of American politics,” Luntz said. “He had 38 per cent favourabil­ity on the day of the election and he still won.”

 ?? Photos / AP ?? Donald Trump said he quickly ended a meeting yesterday with Democrats after they indicated they would not fund his wall under any circumstan­ces.
Photos / AP Donald Trump said he quickly ended a meeting yesterday with Democrats after they indicated they would not fund his wall under any circumstan­ces.
 ??  ?? Nancy Pelosi
Nancy Pelosi
 ??  ?? Mike Pence
Mike Pence

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