The Trump White House and Capitol Hill Republicans cranked up the
pressure Monday on Democrats to abandon their immediate demands for
immigration measures and vote in support of a temporary spending bill to
end a government shutdown now in its third day.
“They shut down the government,” White House counselor Kellyanne Conway
told “Fox & Friends” on Monday morning. “The pressure is on them.”
President Trump tweeted that Democrats shut down the government to
appease the “far left base” and are now “powerless” to change course
“The Democrats are turning down services and security for citizens in
favor of services and security for non-citizens. Not good!” he tweeted
A critical test vote is now set for early afternoon on a measure to fund
the government through Feb. 8. The vote would end a Democratic
filibuster that forced the shutdown overnight Friday – and could require
nearly a dozen total votes from Democratic members this time around.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., announced on the floor
ahead of the test vote that they’ve reached an agreement -- and “will
vote today to re-open the government.”
He said this comes with a commitment to negotiate on immigration, and
immediately consider such legislation if there’s no agreement by Feb. 8.
The vote will be the GOP-controlled Senate’s second attempt to break the
filibuster, after failing to get the required 60 votes Friday. But
whether Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has the votes
remains unclear.
Republicans have a 51-49 member majority in the Senate. The Friday night
vote was 50-49.
Arizona GOP Sen. John McCain did not vote because he’s home recovering
from cancer. Four other Republican senators -- Sens. Lindsey Graham, of
South Carolina; Rand Paul, of Kentucky; Mike Lee, of Utah; and Jeff
Flake, of Arizona -- voted against the bill.
The Capitol Visitor Center is empty, as the government shutdown
enters its third day.
Flake and Graham were part of a bipartisan group of senators that met
Sunday to broker a possible deal in which rank-and-file members would
provide the 60 votes, then perhaps help pass the spending bill later
this week by a simple 51-vote majority. In exchange, McConnell has vowed
to immediately address immigration reform.
“When the Democrat filibuster of the government funding bill ends, the
serious, bipartisan negotiations that have been going on for months now
to resolve our unfinished business -- military spending; disaster
relief; healthcare; immigration and border security -- will continue,”
McConnell said Sunday night in announcing the noon vote. “It would be my
intention to resolve these issues as quickly as possible … Importantly,
when I proceed to the immigration debate, it will have an amendment
process that is fair to all sides. But the first step in any of this is
re-opening the government and preventing any further delay.”
Graham and Flake are expected to support the spending measure this time.
If that holds, and the five Democrats who supported the first bill
support this one, an additional six Democrats are needed to break the
filibuster. Pressure could be heavy on senators who represent states
with large federal workforces – like Virginia’s Tim Kaine and Mark
Warner and Maryland’s Ben Cardin and Chris Van Hollen. Likewise,
Democratic senators up for reelection this fall or from swing states
could face pressure – like Ohio’s Sherrod Brown or Pennsylvania’s Bob
Casey.
Democrats have withheld the votes on a spending bill in an attempt to
force Trump and fellow Republicans in Congress to include protections
for illegal immigrants brought into the United States as children.
Trump will in early March formally end deportation protections provided
to the estimated 800,000 illegal immigrants now protected by former
President Barack Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals
executive order.
Trump has said he wants comprehensive immigration reform but that border
security, particularly a U.S.-Mexico border wall, should be included in
the plan.
Schumer, D-N.Y., argued again Sunday that he offered a compromise
immigration plan to Trump to avoid a shutdown, including billions for
his must-have wall.
“On Friday in the Oval Office, I made what I thought was a very generous
offer to the president, the most generous offer yet,” Schumer said
Sunday on the Senate floor. “The president must take yes for an answer.
Until he does, it’s the Trump Shutdown.”
Republicans are adamant this is the "Schumer Shutdown."
While the Democrats’ move appeals to their liberal base, they have faced
backlash for forcing the shutdown, considering U.S. military personnel
and nearly 1 million other federal employees will be furloughed and not
receive pay until the government reopens.
Flake, who was part of the weekend bipartisan negotiations, later said,
“We have a commitment to move to immigration,” but sounded uncertain
about whether McConnell would have the votes. He also said the
bipartisan group would meet again Monday before the vote.
Five Democratic senators voted Friday to end the filibuster: Sens. Doug
Jones, of Alabama; John Donnelly, of Indiana; Heidi Heitkamp, of North
Dakota; Joe Manchin, of West Virginia; and Claire McCaskill, of
Missouri. They all face 2018 reelection in states that Trump won in
2016.
Fox News’ Chad Pergram contributed to this report |