Call & Times

Congress punts shutdown resolution into next session

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WASHINGTON – Congress effectivel­y gave up Thursday on breaking the impasse over President Donald Trump’s demands for border wall funding, all but ensuring that the partial government shutdown will stretch at least into the start of the new year, when Democrats retake control of the House.

Trump retreated from public view, hurling insults at Democrats over Twitter, as the House and the Senate convened for just minutes before gaveling closed until next week. During the brief session in the House, Republican­s shot down a Democratic attempt to vote on legislatio­n to reopen the government.

The halls of the Capitol were largely vacant, and leaders’ offices were shuttered. There was no sign that negotiatio­ns were taking place. Instead, the two sides traded public recriminat­ions.

Trump, in one of a series of Twitter attacks on Democrats, claimed that the dispute isn’t even about the wall he long claimed Mexico would pay for. “This is only about the Dems not letting Donald Trump & the Republican­s have a win,” he wrote.

Rep. Jim McGovern of Massachuse­tts, the Democrat who was denied on the House floor as he sought a vote to fund the government, said that it was urgent to end the shutdown, adding: “The only people who don’t seem to be in any hurry are the Republican leadership and the president.”

The country on Thursday entered the sixth day of a government shutdown that has closed a quarter of the federal government and furloughed an estimated 350,000 workers, sending them home at risk of losing paychecks during the holiday season. Barring a surprise resolution, it will become the second-longest shutdown of the decade when the new, divided Congress convenes next week to open its 116th session.

“We have not been able to reach agreement, with regards to the leadership on both sides,” Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., told reporters after presiding over a pro forma session in the Senate that lasted less than four minutes.

“In Dodge City, Kansas, they say a horse divided against itself cannot stand,” Roberts added. “That’s about where we are.”

Around the federal government, the effects were spreading, even though the bulk of the government – including the Pentagon, the Health and Human Services Department and Congress itself – has been funded through September, thanks to spending bills passed earlier in the year and signed by Trump.

The Office of Personnel Management sent out a Twitter post Thursday in which it shared advice and letter templates for federal workers to use in negotiatin­g for deferred rent and payments to other creditors.

“As we discussed, I am a Federal employee who has recently been furloughed due to a lack of funding of my agency. Because of this, my income has been severely cut and I am unable to pay the entire cost of my rent, along with my other ex- penses,” one of the sample letters says. It also suggests the possibilit­y of doing building chores in exchange for reduced payments.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency and the Smithsonia­n museums, two department­s that had followed the White House’s direction to find money to stay open as long as possible, announced Thursday that reserve funds that had carried them through this week will end, shuttering the EPA on Friday at midnight and the museum and the National Zoo starting Wednesday.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency said the National Flood Insurance Program would not issue new policies during the shutdown, a potential nightmare for would-be home buyers who need the insurance before closing.

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