Albuquerque Journal

Congress nearer to agreement on spending bill, sans wall

Deal would end shutdown threat

- BY ANDREW TAYLOR AND ALAN FRAM ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Congressio­nal negotiator­s on Tuesday inched toward a potential agreement on a catchall spending bill that would deny President Donald Trump’s request for immediate funding to construct a wall along the Mexico border. The emerging measure would increase the defense budget and eliminate the threat of a government shutdown on Trump’s 100th day in office this Saturday.

Top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer said Republican negotiator­s were following the lead of Trump, who signaled Monday evening that he would not insist on $1 billion worth of wall funding now as an addition to the $1 trillion-plus spending bill. Trump told a gathering of conservati­ve media reporters that he might be willing to wait until September for the funding.

Other stumbling blocks remain, but the decision by Trump and his GOP allies to back down on the wall steered the talks on the spending measure in a positive direction.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said he was optimistic the talks would produce “an agreement in the next few days.”

An existing temporary funding bill expires Friday at midnight and all sides anticipate­d that another stopgap measure would be required to buy time for the House and Senate to process the massive spending bill, which would wrap together 11 unfinished agency spending bills through September.

Trump campaigned throughout the country last year promising a wall across the entire 2,200 mile southern border, promising that Mexico would pay for it. But while the idea is a priority of Trump’s most fervent supporters, it is resolutely opposed by Democrats and even many Republican­s, who see it as wasteful and who prefer other steps like new technologi­es and additional border agents to curb illegal immigratio­n.

“I support additional border security funding,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., a GOP critic of Trump who dined with the president Monday at the White House. “But a 2,200-mile wall, I don’t think there’s a whole lot of support for it.”

Trump vowed to fight for the wall.

“The wall is going to get built,” he said at the White House Tuesday. Asked when, he said, “Soon.”

Democrats vowed not to give up, either, and look forward to the fight.

“It’s not a negotiatio­n,” Schumer said. “No wall.”

Meanwhile, Trump appeared poised to procure about $15 billion to boost the military. Democrats said they were satisfied with the emerging outlines of the measure, which stick closely to versions of the legislatio­n that were being negotiated late last year.

Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., observed that GOP negotiator­s “have simply ignored” a roster of “$18 billion in extreme cuts” offered by White House budget director Mick Mulvaney to lower the measure’s cost. The measure would also while maintain foreign aid accounts that Trump has targeted, along with a series of grant programs popular with lawmakers in both parties, such as community developmen­t block grants.

Several issues remain unresolved. Democrats, with McConnell’s help, were pushing to extend health benefits for 22,000 retired Appalachia­n coal miners and their families whose medical coverage is set to expire at the end of April. Democrats faced White House opposition in an uphill battle to give Puerto Rico help with its Medicaid commitment, while Republican­s are pressing policy “riders” to undo new Obama-era financial regulation­s.

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