Houston Chronicle

House Dems have strategy to end shutdown

Bills would separate funding wall, government in challenge to GOP

- By Erica Werner and Seung Min Kim

WASHINGTON — Democrats will take control of the House on Thursday with a stark challenge to President Donald Trump, voting on legislatio­n that would fund the federal government while denying Trump the money he has demanded to build a wall along the U.S.Mexico border.

GOP leaders in the Senate said they would support only a proposal that has the president’s backing. And without additional wall money, the Democrats’ offer is unlikely to break the stalemate that has shuttered large parts of the federal government since Dec. 22.

But the strategy Democrats announced Monday would usher in a new era of divided government in

Washington with a dare to Trump, aimed at forcing him and Senate Republican­s to take their deal or prolong a partial government shutdown.

House Democrats plan to use their new majority to vote through measures that would reopen nearly all of the shuttered federal agencies through the end of September, at funding levels Senate Republican­s have previously agreed to. Those spending bills contain scores of priorities and pet projects for lawmakers on both sides of the aisle.

The Democratic proposal holds out one exception: The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees border security, would keep its current level of funding, with no new money for a border wall. The plan would also extend the department’s budget only through Feb. 8, allowing Democrats to revisit funding for key parts of Trump’s immigratio­n policy in a month.

“The President is using the government shutdown to try to force an expensive and ineffectiv­e wall upon the American people, but Democrats have offered two bills which separate the arguments over the wall from the government shutdown,” read a joint statement from House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., the likely next House speaker, and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

Republican leaders would have the option to pass the bipartisan bills, reopening much of the government while the border fight continued, but doing so could diminish Trump’s leverage as he demands billions in taxpayer funding for a wall.

On Monday, a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said the Senate, which will remain under Republican control, will bring up only legislatio­n that has the president’s blessing.

“It’s simple: The Senate is not going to send something to the president that he won’t sign,” Don Stewart, McConnell’s spokesman, wrote in an email Monday.

The president has asked for $5 billion in border money, far beyond the $1.3 billion that Democrats plan to vote through this week. Trump on Monday invited Democrats to continue negotiatio­ns but reiterated that he had no plans to back down.

The White House did not comment Monday on House Democrats’ plan. ‘Non-starter’

One of Trump’s close congressio­nal allies, Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., dismissed the proposal from Democrats.

“Nancy Pelosi’s newest funding proposal doesn’t represent any serious attempt to secure our border or find a compromise,” Meadows wrote on Twitter, adding that the plan was “a non-starter and will not be a legitimate answer to this impasse.”

The deadlock has resulted in what is already the longest partial government shutdown since a 16day standoff in 2013 over the Affordable Care Act.

Some 800,000 federal workers have been affected, with an estimated 350,000 furloughed at home and the others still working because their jobs are deemed “essential.” Thus far workers have not missed a paycheck, but that will begin to happen if the shutdown is not resolved soon. Many federal contractor­s are without work as well.

“The biggest reaction still remains anxiety: When will this end?” said Rep. Gerald E. Connolly, a Democrat whose Northern Virginia district is home to tens of thousands of federal workers. “Coupled with now the creeping reality of the financial consequenc­es if this goes on too long, everything from ‘Can I pay rent on time?’ to ‘What kind of obligation­s, if any, can I incur while it’s uncertain whether I get a paycheck?’ “

The American Federation of Government Employees, the largest federal employee union, representi­ng some 700,000 workers, on Monday announced that it was suing the federal government over the shutdown, writing in a statement that “the federal government is violating the law by requiring some federal employees to work without pay during a shutdown.”

In an issue unrelated to the border wall but important to federal workers, the package of full-year bills that Democrats plan to pass would include a 1.9 percent raise for civilian workers that Trump has sought to deny.

Earlier in December, Senate Republican­s signed off on a plan that would have averted the shutdown but did not include new wall money, only to have Trump publicly denounce the proposal the next day. McConnell, who will remain in charge of the Senate in 2019 as the House flips to Democratic control, does not want to put his lawmakers in that position again.

Funding DHS

House Democrats settled on the approach of funding the Department of Homeland Security on a short-term basis after liberals objected to a proposal to fund the agency through the rest of the 2018 fiscal year, even without increasing spending at the border.

A coalition of advocacy groups, including the ACLU, sent Pelosi and Schumer a letter Friday opposing extending funding for the Department of Homeland Security for a full year, citing concerns that such an approach “clearly funds Trump’s wall project and must be rejected.”

A spokeswoma­n for the ACLU said Monday that the group supports extending Homeland Security funding to Feb. 8, which would allow newly empowered Democrats more latitude in determinin­g the agency’s budget for the remainder of fiscal 2018.

Trump canceled a planned trip to his Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Fla., to stay in Washington to deal with the shutdown, but he has not been in touch with Democratic leaders. There have been no face-to-face negotiatio­ns since Vice President Pence and others held meetings at the Capitol on Dec. 22, the day the shutdown began. Pence made Democrats an offer that lowered proposed spending on the wall, but they rejected it in part because it included what they called a $400,000 “slush fund” that Trump could have spent on other immigratio­n priorities.

Despite Republican­s holding a bigger majority in the Senate in the next Congress, some Democratic votes will still be needed to pass funding legislatio­n there, and Democratic senators, even more moderate ones, have been resolute against money for a wall.

The Pentagon-Labor Department, the Health and Human Services Department and others are mostly not affected by the shutdown. Programs like Medicare, Social Security and Medicaid also are unaffected, since their budgets proceed automatica­lly, without the need for annual congressio­nal appropriat­ions.

 ?? Elaine Thompson / AP ?? Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion officers assist travelers with luggage through a security screening area Monday during the partial shutdown.
Elaine Thompson / AP Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion officers assist travelers with luggage through a security screening area Monday during the partial shutdown.
 ?? Erin Schaff / NYT ?? House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., released a joint statement Monday on the Democrats’ strategy separating border funding from other federal funding.
Erin Schaff / NYT House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., released a joint statement Monday on the Democrats’ strategy separating border funding from other federal funding.

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