Los Angeles Times

Deadlock grips frantic talks on eve of shutdown

Negotiatio­ns were expected to continue Saturday as both parties levy blame for federal funding crisis.

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Despite last-minute negotiatio­ns Friday between President Trump and Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer, Congress remained deadlocked over a spending bill and the federal government was headed toward a shutdown at midnight.

White House budget director Mick Mulvaney predicted any closure would be brief and said negotiatio­ns would probably continue Saturday. He said disruption­s from a shutdown over the weekend would be minimal.

“There’s a really good chance it gets fixed” before Monday, he told reporters.

One possibilit­y would be an agreement to provide funding for a few more days or weeks to allow time for negotiatio­ns on a key sticking point: immigratio­n reform. That would be the fourth temporary spending measure passed this fiscal year, probably to be quickly followed by a fifth.

The frantic talks behind closed doors Friday evening came as Congress pushed the federal government to the brink of what would be the first shutdown since 2013, when Republican­s led the unpopular 16-day closure in their failed effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare.

Senate Democrats — joined by some GOP deficit hawks and immigratio­n allies — were set to filibuster a stopgap funding bill approved by the House on Thursday. A Senate vote was planned for 10 p.m. ET, and even White House officials predicted it would fail.

Trump postponed his weekend getaway to Mar-aLago as the livelihood­s of federal workers hung in the balance. On Friday morning, Trump reached out directly to Schumer, who rushed to the White House for a 90-minute meeting.

After the meeting between the two New Yorkers — which was attended only by the two of them and their chiefs of staff — Schumer, who cut a previous budget deal with Trump in the fall

over the strong objections of GOP leaders, said progress had been made but disagreeme­nts remained. Trump, in a tweet, called it an “excellent preliminar­y meeting.”

But according to Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), Trump largely washed his hands of the crisis and urged congressio­nal leaders to sort it out themselves. “He wasn’t going to get in the middle of it,” Cornyn said. “It’s not his job. It’s Congress’ job.”

At best, Congress would only be working on another short-term plan to keep agencies open. Whether a shutdown takes place or not, the constant short-term budgeting has caused serious damage, Defense Secretary James N. Mattis warned Friday.

The constant round of short-term measures, known as continuing resolution­s, has been “debilitati­ng” for military readiness, Mattis said. “No enemy in the field has done more to harm the readiness of the U.S. military than the combined impact of the Budget Control Act’s defense spending caps, and nine of the last 10 years operating under continuing resolution­s.”

As the day went on, lawmakers scrambled to assign blame. Republican­s started characteri­zing the standoff as the “Schumer Shutdown.” They accused Democratic senators of holding money for government agencies “hostage” as Democrats demanded deportatio­n protection­s for “Dreamers,” young immigrants who came to the U.S. illegally as children. Protected status for Dreamers, which has allowed them to live and work legally in the U.S., could expire soon because Trump wants to end the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) decried Democrats for putting the needs of Dreamers ahead of the rest of the country and having “shoehorned” immigratio­n into the funding debate when Congress has at least until March before the DACA program expires. A federal court has ordered the administra­tion to keep DACA intact for now, and although the administra­tion has appealed that ruling to the Supreme Court, it has not taken any steps to block it.

Republican­s also accused Democrats of hypocrisy, noting that in the past, when Republican­s have tried to use shutdown threats, Democrats have said that keeping government agencies funded should take priority over policy disputes.

Democrats say any shutdown would be the Republican­s’ fault because they control both houses of Congress and the White House. The DACA dispute could have been resolved last week if Trump had accepted a bipartisan deal negotiated by Sens. Lindsey Graham (RS.C.) and Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.), the Democrats point out.

Graham had said he would oppose the Housepasse­d bill. So did Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), undercutti­ng Republican efforts to blame a shutdown on Democrats.

As Trump tried to forge a compromise on immigratio­n, he was also having to clean up the mess left by vulgar comments he made during an Oval Office meeting last week, when he said he didn’t want immigrants from “shithole” countries like those in Africa. That meeting derailed the bipartisan deal.

The House was scheduled to adjourn Friday for a weeklong break. But House leaders warned members to stay in town.

Some lawmakers, including Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d), had travel plans. His office said McCarthy would not go to Switzerlan­d for the annual confab at Davos if the government shuts down.

Each side is facing strong pressure from core constituen­cies to stand up to the other.

Dreamer advocates have insisted Democrats should oppose any more money bills until the status of DACA is resolved.

On the Republican side, conservati­ves have warned that any measure that could be characteri­zed as “amnesty” for people who entered the country illegally would splinter Trump’s support.

In both parties, some strategist­s believed the public would blame the other side for a shutdown. Others said there may not be much of a voter reaction. The 2013 shutdown, though blamed largely on Republican­s and Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, hurt Republican­s for a time but did little lasting political damage. In 2014, Republican­s won control of the Senate for the first time since 2006.

Democrats were counting on polling showing that Americans overwhelmi­ngly support protection­s for the young Dreamers. “If you want to know the urgency, look into the gallery behind me,” Durbin said Thursday evening, as immigrants filled the visitor section during the debate.

The most recent polling suggests the GOP faces the biggest risk. By a 20-point margin, Americans pinned blame on Trump and Republican­s who control Congress, with 28% blaming Democrats, according to the Washington Post/ABC News poll released Friday.

The survey said 18% would blame both equally. Independen­t voters would blame Trump and Republican­s by a wide margin, the poll found.

A White House official described Trump’s state of mind earlier in the day as “resolute,” confident that Democrats would be blamed, particular­ly those “auditionin­g for 2020” and the presidenti­al election.

“Shutdown coming?” Trump tweeted Friday morning. “We need more Republican victories in 2018!”

Marc Short, Trump’s legislativ­e director, told reporters that Trump was busy calling lawmakers from both parties. “He is leading on this issue,” Short said.

After the meeting with Schumer, Trump called lawmakers to assure them he would not make a unilateral deal with Democrats, as he did in September.

Trump left a planned gala at Mar-a-Lago on his calendar for Saturday. The political fundraisin­g ball, for which tickets were being sold for six figures, is intended to celebrate his oneyear anniversar­y in office. But his presence there could look bad during a shutdown.

 ?? Mark Wilson Getty Images ?? WHITE HOUSE budget director Mick Mulvaney addresses reporters Friday, when he predicted negotiatio­ns would continue Saturday and said any disruption­s from a weekend government shutdown would be minimal.
Mark Wilson Getty Images WHITE HOUSE budget director Mick Mulvaney addresses reporters Friday, when he predicted negotiatio­ns would continue Saturday and said any disruption­s from a weekend government shutdown would be minimal.
 ?? Win McNamee Getty Images ?? SENATE Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer returns to the Capitol after a meeting with President Trump that Schumer said led to progress but no deal.
Win McNamee Getty Images SENATE Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer returns to the Capitol after a meeting with President Trump that Schumer said led to progress but no deal.

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