TRUMP WOULD 'LOVE' A SHUTDOWN, BUT SENATORS HAVE OTHER PLANS
Senate leaders forge ahead
on funding deal as Trump threatens shutdown.
Senate leaders expressed
optimism Tuesday that a government spending deal could be near even as
President Donald Trump said he would "love to see a shutdown" if
Democrats don't meet his demands on border security and reforming the legal
immigration system.
Senate Minority
Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell,
R-Ky., told reporters that progress had been made on a deal that would set
spending levels for two years — a much longer term agreement than the
incremental stop-gap measures Congress has passed so far this fiscal year.
"Senator
Schumer and I had a good meeting this morning about a caps deal and the other
issues we've been discussing for some months now. I'm optimistic that very soon
we'll be able to reach an agreement," McConnell said.
While the exact path
to a spending deal is still uncertain, members on both sides of the aisle made
it clear Tuesday that nobody wants another government shutdown. Still, Trump
mystified Congress by cheering for one just two days before the funding
deadline.
"I'd love to
see a shutdown if we can't get this stuff taken care of," Trump said
during a round table with law enforcement at the White House Tuesday afternoon.
"If we have to shut it down because the Democrats don't want safety ...
let's shut it down."
Rep. Barbara
Comstock of Virginia, a Republican facing a tough re-election fight in the
midterms, was in attendance and told Trump directly, "We don't need a
shutdown over this."
The House of
Representatives passed a short-term spending bill Tuesday night, but it has
little chance of passing the Senate as written.
It was drafted by
Republican leadership to win the support of the conservative Freedom Caucus and
defense hawks who are squeamish about supporting a fifth stop-gap funding bill.
It funds the government
for an additional six weeks, until March 23, but it would fund the Defense
Department with a boost of $65 billion more than last year for the remainder of
the fiscal year.
“I urge the Senate
Democrats to stop their filibuster and provide our men and women in uniform the
resources they need, the support they need,” House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis.,
said Tuesday morning.
But Schumer,
speaking on the Senate floor, said any increase in defense spending should be
accompanied by an equal increase domestic spending.
"House
Republicans continue marching down a very partisan road," Schumer said, by
proposing a funding bill that "will raise defense spending but leave
everything else behind."
“We support an
increase in funding for our military and our middle class. The two are not
mutually exclusive. We don’t want to do just one and leave the other behind,”
Schumer added.
It's the same debate
that's been raging since the fiscal year began on Oct. 1 — and the reason
Congress has continued to pass continuing resolutions instead of appropriating
money for the entire year. The incremental bills have given lawmakers more time
to reach a deal, but negotiators have yet to reach a consensus on top-line
spending levels that would satisfy both parties' demands — increased military
spending for Republicans, and an equal increase in domestic spending for
Democrats — and fund the federal government for longer than weeks at a time.
Talks have also
slowed for unrelated reasons, as well. Republicans were sidetracked in the fall
with tax reform, and Democrats halted headway last month to demand progress on
protections for Dreamers, immigrants who had been brought to the U.S. illegally
as children. Their legal status could be in jeopardy after President Donald
Trump gave Congress a March 5 deadline to find a permanent solution to the
Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, program.
Source: NBC
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