Orlando Sentinel

House Dems vote to reopen government

- By Matthew Daly, Catherine Lucey and Jill Colvin Associated Press

WASHINGTON — On their first day in the majority, House Democrats on Thursday night passed a plan to reopen the government without funding President Donald Trump’s promised border wall.

The largely party-line votes came after Trump made a surprise appearance at the White House briefing room pledging to keep up the fight for his signature campaign promise.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Trump and Senate Republican­s should “take yes for an answer” and approve the border bill, which was virtually identical to a plan the Senate adopted on a voice vote last month.

“We’re not doing a wall. Does anyone have any doubt that we’re not doing a wall?” Pelosi told reporters. Pelosi, who was elected speaker earlier in the day, also took a shot a Trump, calling his proposal “a wall between reality and his constituen­ts.”

Trump strode into the White House briefing room Thursday — the 13th day of the partial government shutdown — and declared that “without a wall you cannot have border security.” He then left without taking questions from reporters.

The appearance came hours after the new Congress convened, with Democrats taking majority control of the House and returning Pelosi to the speakershi­p after eight years of GOP control. The Democratic legislatio­n to re-open the government without funding the wall is going nowhere in the Senate, where Republican­s want Trump’s endorsemen­t before voting on a funding package.

Trump is demanding billions of dollars to build his wall along the U.S. border with Mexico, which the Democrats have refused.

Asked if she would give Trump $1 for a wall to reopen the government, Pelosi said: “One dollar? Yeah, one dollar. The fact is a wall is an immorality. It’s not who we are as a nation.”

Congressio­nal leaders from both parties met with Trump at the White House on Wednesday but failed to make progress during their first sit-down in weeks. The White House has invited the leaders back Friday for another round of talks that officials have suggested might be more successful now that Pelosi has been sworn in.

Reporters were told Thursday that White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders would be holding a hastily called late afternoon briefing. Instead, out walked Trump, flanked by members of the unions that represent border patrol and immigratio­n enforcemen­t agents. It was his first time delivering remarks at the briefing room lectern.

“You can call it a barrier, you can call it whatever you want,” Trump said. “But essentiall­y we need protection in our country. We’re going to make it good. The people of our country want it.”

He also claimed his refusal to budge was winning praise, telling reporters, “I have never had so much support as I have in the last week over my stance for border security.”

Polls show a majority of Americans oppose the border wall, although Republican­s strongly support it.

White House and Department of Homeland Security officials have spent recent days trying to make a public and private case that the situation at the border has reached a “crisis” situation that demands more money than Democrats have offered.

Trump tweeted a video Thursday with images of what appeared to be migrants trying to rush the border and clashing with law enforcemen­t, beneath the words “crisis at the border,” “drugs” and “crime.”

The Democratic package to end the shutdown includes a bill to temporaril­y fund the Department of Homeland Security at current levels — with $1.3 billion for border security, far less than Trump has said he wants— through Feb. 8 as bipartisan talks continue. It was approved, 239-192.

Democrats also approved a separate measure to fund the department­s of Agricultur­e, Interior, Housing and Urban Developmen­t and others closed by the partial shutdown. The bill, which would provide money through the end of the fiscal year Sept. 30, was approved, 241-190.

The White House has rejected the package.

But some Republican senators appeared open to at least part of the Democrats’ proposal.

“I’m not saying their whole plan is a valid plan, but I see no reason why the bills that are ready to go and on which we’ve achieved an agreement should be held hostage to this debate over border security,” said Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine.

“Congress needs to take further action on border security, but that work should be done when the government is fully open,” added Sen. Cory Gardner, R-Colo.

Vice President Mike Pence took a hard line, telling Fox News Channel’s Tucker Carlson, “Bottom line, if there’s no wall, there’s no deal.”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? “I have never had so much support as I have in the last week over my stance for border security,” President Trump told reporters Thursday in the White House briefing room.
EVAN VUCCI/AP “I have never had so much support as I have in the last week over my stance for border security,” President Trump told reporters Thursday in the White House briefing room.

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