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NewsDecember 13, 2018

WASHINGTON -- Congressional leaders Wednesday were digging in for a fight over government funding, a day after a combative White House meeting with President Donald Trump seemed to raise the likelihood of a partial government shutdown. Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said Trump was holding parts of the government "hostage to a petty campaign pledge" to build a border wall with Mexico in order to "fire up" his political base...

By CATHERINE LUCEY and MATTHEW DALY ~ Associated Press
President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting in December with Democratic leaders in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington.
President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting in December with Democratic leaders in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington.Evan Vucci ~ Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- Congressional leaders Wednesday were digging in for a fight over government funding, a day after a combative White House meeting with President Donald Trump seemed to raise the likelihood of a partial government shutdown.

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said Trump was holding parts of the government "hostage to a petty campaign pledge" to build a border wall with Mexico in order to "fire up" his political base.

Schumer, who met with Trump and House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi on Tuesday, said the American people will "suffer needlessly" if Trump follows through on his threat to shut down parts of the government as of Dec. 21 unless $5 billion for the southern border wall is included in a must-pass spending bill.

Trump said Tuesday he is "proud to shut down the government" in the name of border security, declaring: "I will take the mantle. I will be the one to shut it down."

On Twitter on Wednesday, Trump said a deadly shooting attack in France shows the need for the border wall.

"Chuck and Nancy must give us the votes to get additional Border Security!" he wrote, referring to Schumer and Pelosi.

But the suspect accused of spraying gunfire at a Christmas market in the city of Strasbourg on Tuesday is a French native, not an immigrant. Police were hunting Wednesday for Cherif Chekatt, born in Strasbourg and well-known to law enforcement.

The funding fight is something leaders of both parties had hoped to avoid as Congress seeks to wrap up its work for the year and adjourn for the holidays. But Trump, who for months had suggested he'd be willing to force a shutdown over wall funding, dashed hopes for a quick resolution Tuesday, sparring with Pelosi and Schumer during an extraordinary Oval Office meeting he made sure played out in front of television cameras.

Schumer, D-N.Y., said Trump threw a "temper tantrum" after Tuesday's televised confrontation, saying he and Pelosi "spoke truth to power" by contradicting Trump's "blatant falsehoods" about the wall.

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"The president is so used to obsequious advisers who fail to dispel his false and made-up facts that he lives in a cocoon of his own truth," Schumer said in a Senate speech. He and Pelosi "had to tell him, 'No, Mr. President that's not true,'" Schumer said. "We had to puncture that cocoon."

Schumer's remarks came as House Republicans debate whether to try to pass the wall funding to put pressure on Democrats, but it's not clear if that plan would succeed.

House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., who supports Trump's $5 billion request for the wall, said House leaders were "working through" what funding level to propose. Asked if the House would vote on the $5 billion request, McCarthy said, "That's the number I always search for."

Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, who is set to become the No. 3 House Republican in January, said Wednesday that House Republicans "stand ready to pass whatever the Senate can get passed" and Trump will sign.

Schumer said Wednesday it is "nearly impossible" to negotiate with Trump, accusing the president of peddling "blatant and dangerous falsehoods" about the wall, including his widely refuted claim Mexico will pay for it.

The Democrats said they have given Trump two options to keep government open, and the responsibility is with him and Republicans who control Congress.

The wall remains the main sticking point in talks. Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan acknowledged Tuesday the GOP-led House has yet to pass legislation including the $5 billion in border wall funds Trump has been requesting. Ryan likely lacks sufficient votes from Republicans who will lose their majority at the end of the month.

Democrats have offered $1.3 billion for border security, including physical barriers and technology along the U.S. southern border.

If the two sides do not make a deal by Dec. 21, about one-quarter of the government will be affected, including the departments of Homeland Security, Transportation, Agriculture, State and Justice, as well as national parks.

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