US govt partially shuts as Congress, Trump fail to reach deal

616

WASHINGTON, Dec 22, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – The US government began a Christmas
shutdown early Saturday, after Congress adjourned without passing a federal
spending bill or addressing President Donald Trump’s demand for money to
build a border wall.

Operations for several key agencies ceased at 12:01 am Saturday (5:01 GMT),
despite last-ditch talks that continued on Capitol Hill between White House
officials and congressional leaders in both parties.

Trump has dug in on his demand for $5 billion for construction of a wall on
the US border with Mexico. Democrats are staunchly opposed, and the absence
of an elusive deal means federal funds for dozens of agencies lapsed when the
clock struck midnight on Friday.

The shutdown is the third this year and it remained unclear how long it
would last. Trump expressed hope late Friday night that it “will not last
long,” after earlier saying he was ready for just that.

The optics are bad, as 800,000 federal employees will be either furloughed
or forced to work without pay in the run-up to the Christmas holiday.

But the prospect of a large portion of government workers going without
paychecks was not enough to spur lawmakers or the president to action.

The House of Representatives adjourned just before 7:00 pm Friday, with no
moves taken to avert a shutdown, and the Senate closed up shop an hour later.

Both are due back in session at noon Saturday.

About three-quarters of the government, including the military and the
Department of Health and Human Services, is fully funded until the end of
September 2019, leaving 25 percent unfunded as of Saturday.

Most NASA employees will be sent home, as will Commerce Department workers
and many at the Departments of Homeland Security, Justice, Agriculture and
State.

National parks will remain open, but most park staff will stay home.

While most critical security functions will be operational, the effects of
the budget wrangling and uncertainty have cast an air of chaos over the
capital, which is also reeling from the resignation announcement Thursday by
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis.

Wall Street ended its worst week in a decade with more bruising losses
Friday.

And the inability of Washington to accomplish one of its most basic tasks –
– keeping the government up and running — has caused deep embarrassment and
anxiety.

– ‘Prepared’ for shutdown –

“It’s up to the Democrats whether or not we have a shutdown tonight,” Trump
said earlier Friday, blaming political opponents for the crisis.

“I hope we don’t,” the president added, but “we’re totally prepared for a
very long shutdown.”

Senators told reporters that congressional leaders from both parties were
negotiating behind the scenes with White House officials including Vice
President Mike Pence, Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, and incoming chief of
staff Mick Mulvaney.

The power trio shuttled from one side of the Capitol to the other, seeking
a breakthrough with Republicans and Democrats.

It did not come on Friday.

Should they eventually strike a deal, it could swiftly clear Congress and
reach the president’s desk, said Senate Republican Bob Corker.

“Now Republicans and Democrats both own the success or failure to fund
government.”

One focus of discussion was the $1.6 billion in border security funding
that was a part of pending Senate legislation, number two Senate Republican
John Cornyn told AFP.

But conservatives in the House would likely balk at that figure.

“There’s no agreement,” congressman Mark Meadows, chairman of the House
Freedom Caucus of ultra-conservatives, told reporters as he left a closed-
door meeting on the Capitol’s Senate side.

“There’s a whole lot of numbers being thrown around,” but a maximum $1.6
billion for border security “is not acceptable.”

Cornyn suggested the art of the deal was less about grandstanding and more
about a logical compromise to break the impasse.

“The House is at five (billion dollars for border security), the Democrats
are at zero,” he said. “It doesn’t sound like that’s rocket science to come
up with a figure.”

– ‘Hostage’ –

Trump reversed course Thursday and rejected a measure that had unanimously
passed the Senate and was under House consideration.

It would have extended government funding until February 8, but contained
no money for a border wall, a pet project Trump has fought for since his
presidential campaign.

Democrats painted Trump as the Grinch who stole the year-end deal.

“This #shutdown is brought to you by @POTUS & @HouseGOP,” congresswoman
Kathleen Rice tweeted. “Instead of passing the Senate’s funding bill, they
decided to hold this country hostage.”

With lawmakers like Meadows and prominent conservative commentators
demanding that the president stick to his campaign promises, Trump doubled
down on his wall.

The House swiftly passed a bill that fulfilled the president’s demands. It
included $5.7 billion in wall funding, and $7.8 billion in disaster relief.

But it stalled at the first hurdle in the Senate.

Trump was scheduled to fly to Florida Friday for his Christmas break, but
he postponed the trip to help salvage a deal.