The Day

Congress tries again for border deal

Negotiator­s homing in on barrier funding between $1.3 billion and $2 billion

- By ERIK WASSON and JACK FITZPATRIC­K

Washington — Congressio­nal negotiator­s dug in for a weekend of talks on a security plan that includes some sort of barrier on the U.S.-Mexican border, hoping to complete a deal that’s also acceptable to President Donald Trump and avoid another government shutdown.

Negotiator­s are homing in on a deal with border barrier funding of $1.3 billion to $2 billion, a person familiar with the talks. Trump has demanded $5.7 billion.

Rep. Steven Palazzo, R-Miss., a Republican member of the House-Senate panel holding the talks, said Friday that he expects a deal “before the end of the weekend” that could be finalized Monday. He said some key details are still under negotiatio­n.

Another Republican on the negotiatin­g panel, Rep. Chuck Fleischman­n of Tennessee, said the party wants as much barrier funding as possible, and that he hopes the final amount is above $2 billion. House Appropriat­ions Committee spokesman Evan Hollander said in a statement that Democrats want the figure to be less than $2 billion.

Even so, Fleischman said chances of a government shutdown triggered by an impasse are “next to nil.”

“There’s next to no appetite in the room on either side in either body, and that’s a good thing. We didn’t want the government shut down the first time,” he said Friday.

Indicating the level of distaste for another shutdown, Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., said in late January that closing the government as a bargaining chip in budget negotiatio­ns “should be as off-limits as chemical weapons are to warfare.”

Democrats and Republican­s continued to exchange proposals on Friday. Texas Republican Representa­tive Kay Granger said there still were “issues to be worked out.”

“It is not just numbers” on money, she said. “It is a fence and all that comes with it.”

The biggest wild card remains Trump. If the president doesn’t agree to a deal reached by bipartisan negotiator­s, some Republican senators say they’re unlikely to go along with it, although Majority Leader Mitch McConnell hasn’t ruled out bringing it to a vote.

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