SHUTDOWN ENDS AFTER DEMOCRATS AGREE TO TRUST THAT MCCONNELL WILL ALLOW ‘DREAMER’ VOTE
After three days of
contentious negotiations and name-calling, U.S. Congress voted to end a government
shutdown Monday when Democrats agreed to trust the word of Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell.
President Trump
signed the spending bill Monday evening.
The impact of the
shutdown, which began at midnight Friday, was minimal, leaving hundreds of
thousands of federal workers unsure of what the week would bring — but
stretching into just one workday.
Lawmakers agreed to
fund the government through Feb. 8 after McConnell (R-Ky.) said he would
address the status of young immigrants called “dreamers” who were brought to
this country illegally as children.
The pact came at a
time when trust has been in short supply on Capitol Hill — and it unnerved
liberal activists who weren’t sure whether to believe McConnell.
McConnell delivered
a carefully worded speech on the Senate floor, saying it was his “intention” to
address the dreamer issue, whether in the next spending bill or thereafter. He
did not offer a specific promise to protect dreamers, and he suggested that he
would offer nothing if the government shut down again, but he said he would
follow an evenhanded process.
Even if such a bill
passed the Senate, it remained entirely unclear Monday how it would fare in the
more conservative House.
But the deal was
enough for 33 Senate Democrats, who joined 48 Republicans to break an impasse
that cleared the way for federal agencies to reopen late Monday.
“ ‘Trust but verify’
is my motto,” said Sen. Angus King (Maine), an independent who caucuses with
Democrats. “He’s made this commitment publicly, he made it on the floor of the
Senate. He was much more specific this morning than he was last night, and
frankly this is an important opportunity for him to demonstrate that he will
carry through.”
Senate Minority
Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) endorsed the plan, which also reauthorizes
the Children’s Health Insurance Program for six years and rolls back several
health-care taxes.
On Monday evening,
the House quickly passed it, sending it to Trump for his signature.
“I am pleased that
Democrats in Congress have come to their senses,” Trump said in a statement. He
vowed to “work toward solving the problem of very unfair illegal immigration.”
But for some
Democrats, including senators, the day brought an unsatisfying conclusion to a
risky gambit to force Republicans to help protect dreamers, whose futures were
cast into doubt when Trump canceled an Obama-era program known as Deferred
Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA).
Some Democrats
argued that McConnell had offered no new concessions on immigration. Others
regretted giving up the leverage they believed they had in the government spending
talks. Others said they simply didn’t trust him — or his party — to follow
through.
“He did not make a
commitment,” said Sen. Kamala D. Harris (Calif.), one of 16 Democrats who voted
to block the bill.
Republicans didn’t
make those Democrats feel much better. Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), an immigration
hard-liner, said he didn’t think McConnell was making any more of a promise
Monday than he had last week.
“He has not changed
since Friday,” Cotton said. “He has not changed since September.”
Even Sen. Lindsey O.
Graham (R-S.C.), a proponent of a DACA deal who helped negotiate Monday’s vote,
called into question whether anyone can trust anyone on Capitol Hill.
“Nobody trusts
anybody around here,” Graham said just before the vote. “And most Americans don’t
trust any of us.”
Nonetheless, many
Democrats and Republicans, including Graham, agreed that McConnell had given
some ground in agreeing to pursue an immigration bill to address DACA that both
sides could amend.
Some Democrats said
they voted for the plan because they were growing antsy about continuing a
shutdown with little optimism about resolving the immigration deadlock in the
coming days.
“I just think our
job is to make sure government works for people and their lives get better, and
that’s what I tried to do,” said Sen. Joe Donnelly (D-Ind.), who had voted
against the shutdown to begin with. “Our efforts helped bring the two leaders
together, helped make sure that they talked and helped make sure that a deal
got done.”
Others did so
because about a dozen Republicans had agreed to work with them on immigration
policy. They said that since Democrats deeply mistrust McConnell, perhaps they
could now gang up on him with the help of those skeptical Republicans.
“I’m not trusting in
Mitch McConnell, I’m trusting in [Sen.] Susan Collins and these folks who’ve
really gone out on a limb. We’ve got to start from somewhere,” said Sen. Tammy
Duckworth (D-Ill.), who voted for the spending bill Monday.
The deal, in the
end, was to trade Democratic support for reopening the government for a
commitment by Republicans to address the status of young undocumented
immigrants in February, if not sooner.
Sens. Collins
(R-Maine), Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) and Graham helped broker the agreement, with
Flake and Graham shuttling between huddles with McConnell and Schumer for much
of the weekend.
During bipartisan
meetings in Collins’s office, senators used a device most commonly found in
elementary school classrooms — a talking stick — to avoid unproductive
crosstalk. They eventually switched to a basketball, according to Sen. Joe
Manchin III (D-W.Va.), because it was easier to toss back and forth.
After the vote, some
liberal activists and lawmakers fired off news releases slamming the
arrangement. One called it a “vague promise.” Another labeled it a
“fingers-crossed bargain.”
Angel Padilla,
policy director of Indivisible, a group that promotes liberal grass-roots
advocacy, wondered why Democrats were taking McConnell at his word.
“For months,
Democratic leadership has reassured Dreamers that Democrats would use all their
leverage to get the Dream Act done,” Padilla lamented in a statement Monday.
“Indivisible groups will be paying attention and will remember who follows
through on their commitments to Dreamers today.”
Trust between
Republicans and Democrats has been eroding rapidly in recent weeks and months.
After Sen. Richard
J. Durbin (D-Ill.) confirmed that Trump had referred to Haiti and African
nations as “shithole countries” in a recent Oval Office meeting with lawmakers,
Cotton and Sen. David Perdue (R-Ga.), who were also in the meeting, disputed
his account.
Intraparty tensions
have also been on the rise. Graham has grown frustrated with Cotton and White
House senior adviser Stephen Miller, who hold harder-line views on immigration
and border security. Cotton and the White House have hit back against Graham.
Further complicating
matters, lawmakers are still unclear about what kind of immigration bill Trump
wants to sign. He has offered mixed signals about whether he would back a
measure akin to what centrist Republicans and Democrats favor, leaving some
lawmakers not to trust his word, either.
Even McConnell
suggested uncertainty, during last week’s negotiations, about what the
president would do.
“What I want to see
is an outcome, and an outcome involves the signature of the president of the
United States,” McConnell said. “So what I’m waiting for in terms of making a
decision about floor time is, are we dealing with an issue that has a chance to
become law?
The agreement
reached Monday merely set the parameters of a debate and did not specify the
substance of any potential legislation, leaving the fate of the immigration
issue just as unclear as before.
Multiple proposals
to address the legal status of dreamers have been introduced by Democrats and
Republicans over the past year, including the Dream Act, which would create
ways for more than 1 million eligible dreamers to apply for citizenship. Other
versions of the bill would shrink the pool of eligibility.
With the
negotiations focused on the Senate, Trump remained on the sidelines for much of
the past few days, intermittently interjecting on Twitter to criticize
Democrats and press Republicans to change the rules of the Senate to make it
easier to pass their bill if the standoff was not quickly resolved.
The three-day
stalemate exposed a growing rift between two groups of Democratic senators:
those facing tough reelection campaigns in states Trump won and those courting
liberal voters ahead of possible 2020 presidential bids.
In addition to
Harris, other potential White House contenders who voted against the bill
included Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), Elizabeth
Warren (D-Mass.) and Cory Booker (D-N.J.).
The vote on final
passage in the Senate vote was 81 to 18. Two Republicans, Sens. Rand Paul (Ky.)
and Mike Lee (Utah), voted no. In the House, the measure passed 266 to 150.
Lawmakers in both
chambers and the White House still have to hash out a longer-term deal on
military and domestic spending over the next few weeks, as they face yet
another cliff on Feb. 8.
Ahead of the vote to
end the debate, Schumer warned McConnell to keep his word.
Source : Washington post
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