The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Can moderate Dems talk Pelosi out of extreme border position?

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As things stand now, a House and Senate conference committee is the only hope that Democrats and Republican­s can reach agreement on border security and avoid another government shutdown. The negotiatio­ns — such as they are, for a committee that has met briefly only once in more than a week — are ostensibly between Republican­s and Democrats. But well-informed Republican­s believe it is another set of talks — internal talks among Democrats — that will determine whether the committee succeeds and a shutdown is averted.

“This is not a negotiatio­n between Republican­s and Democrats,” said one GOP lawmaker who is keeping close tabs on the process. “This is a negotiatio­n between rank-and-file Democrats and Nancy Pelosi.”

Why are the intra-Democratic talks so critical? Because Republican­s already agree on the key components of a border security package. They are united behind the need for a border barrier, and they are united behind the other provisions — drug detection technology for ports of entry, more immigratio­n judges, humanitari­an aid for detained migrants — that many members of both parties support as part of a comprehens­ive border security policy. Republican­s are already there.

The question is whether Pelosi can be talked down from her myway-or-the-highway position.

Some members of the conference committee — and not just Republican­s — were surprised when Pelosi made an opening offer that not only zeroed out the $1.6 billion for border fencing that Democrats had previously agreed to, but also zeroed out any money for new Border Patrol agents and slashed funds for ICE detention facilities.

Republican­s believe there are Democrats on the conference committee and in the larger Democratic conference who do not share Pelosi’s immoderati­on. “It’s the Blue Dogs and a lot of the new Democrats,” said a Republican. “There is broad support within (Pelosi’s) conference to resolve this. It’s not just Collin Peterson.”

Peterson is the Minnesota Democratic representa­tive who made news two weeks ago when he said, “Give Trump the money.” During a radio interview, Peterson added, “I’d give him the whole thing ... and put strings on it so you make sure he puts the wall where it needs to be. Why are we fighting over this? We’re going to build that wall anyway, at some time.”

Needless to say, that is not the current position of Peterson’s Democratic leadership. But where, exactly, most Democrats stand on the barrier issue is not entirely clear. Take the recent Fox News Sunday interview with Democratic Rep. Henry Cuellar, a conference committee member who also represents a border district in Texas.

“First of all, we’re not going to have a wall,” Cuellar began, sticking with his leadership. But then: “Now, can we look at some sort of enhanced barrier? That’s something we can certainly look at.”

Cuellar did not explain. Instead, he attempted to make a sort of federalism argument in which local authoritie­s, not the federal government, should control security on the U.S.-Mexico border.

The federal government has the authority to enforce immigratio­n law, and in the end, Washington will indeed determine what, if any, new security measures are put in place on the border. By the time Cuellar was finished, there was absolutely zero clarity on whether there is a Democratic position different from Pelosi’s.

Republican­s believe that such a position does exist and that it could form the basis of a settlement of the current standoff. But for that to happen, Pelosi would have to back away from a stance — walls are immoral — that won the last shutdown fight. She didn’t give an inch and came out on top. Why would she be inclined to make concession­s now, even if some in her party believe it would be best for the country to do so?

 ??  ?? Byron York Columnist
Byron York Columnist

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