Government shutdown: Trump says 'no substitute' for wall on Mexico border but backs away from declaring national emergency
President says he will 'never ever back down' in fight over border security
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Your support makes all the difference.Donald Trump has dismissed a proposal from a key ally in Congress that would end the longest US government shutdown in American history, declaring that he would "never ever back down" over border security..
Twenty-four days into the partial shut down, Mr Trump rejected the idea from Republican Senator Lindsey Graham. The Senator had indicated he discussed the option of reopening the government temporarily as negotiations continue with Democrats over their refusal to sanction a demand from the president for $5.7bn to build a wall on the US-Mexico borer.
That idea had seen some support from Democrats, but the president declined to bite.
“I’m not interested,” Mr Trump said on Monday as he made his way to New Orleans, where he gave a speech to a farming convention. “I want it solved. I don’t want to just delay it. I want to get it solved”.
The comment came just hours after the president tweeted that he had been “waiting all weekend” to negotiate with congressional Democrats to reopen the government and that he believed an end could be negotiated in 15 minutes.
Having dismissed that option from Mr Graham while leaving the White House, Mr Trump used his speech in New Orleans to say there was “no substitute” for a physical barrier along the southern border with Mexico.
He also accused Democrats of playing politics in refusing to negotiate on the issue.
“They think if they stop me, it’ll be good for 2020,” Mr Trump said of Democrats in Congress. “We need that barrier. … If you don’t have that barrier there, there is not a thing you can do.”
However, with the shutdown having left 800,000 federal workers without pay, there are signs that Mr Trump is beginning to lose the battle for public opinion.
A Quinnipiac University poll released on Monday found that 63 per cent of voters agree with the long-standing Democrat proposal to reopen parts of the government that do not involve border security, with 30 per cent opposed.
The same poll found 63 per cent of respondents also oppose using the shutdown to force wall funding, with 32 per cent supporting Mr Trump's stance.
The poll also found that 56 percent of American voters blame Mr Trump and Republicans in Congress for the partial shutdown.
To see how the day unfolded follow our liveblog below
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Ms Graham said:
Before he pulls the plug on the legislative option, and I think we're almost there, I would urge him to open up the government for a short period of time, like three weeks, before he pulls the plug, see if we can get a deal.
If we can't at the end of three weeks, all bets are off.
See if he can do it by himself through the emergency powers. That's my recommendation
In a now-deleted tweet, Trump told farmers in Nashville he would see them in a "little while" as he was getting ready to address the Farm Convention there. Only problem is it is in New Orleans.
Kellyanne Conway, a White House adviser, has appeared on Trump's favourite TV show, Fox & Friends. Here she defends the president's reported attempts to conceal details of meetings he had with Vladimir Putin.
Having missed a first batch of pay since the shutdown on Friday, workers deemed "essential" to government work are clocking in without pay. Here is one of them, Chris Beasley a prison officer.
Senator Chris Coons has echoed calls from fellow Democrats for Donald Trump to reopen the government while negotiations over the wall and larger immigration issues continue.
He acknowledged efforts by senior Republican Lindsey Graham to forge a temporary solution but said Mr Trump has been unpredictable even among fellow conservatives and keeps shifting positions.
"Every time they make progress, the president throws cold water on it," Mr Coons told CNN in an interview.
Senate Homeland Security Committee Chairman Ron Johnson, a Republican from Wisconsin, said he would "hate to see" Mr Trump declare a national emergency over the border to free up funds for his wall. He said that would mean the wall wouldn't get built, presumably because of legal challenges. Democrats voted in the past for border security and should again, he said.
"I actually want to see this wall get built," Mr Johnson said. "I want to keep pressure on Democrats to actually come to the negotiating table in good faith and fund what they have supported in the past."
Donald Trump has said he rejected a proposal from a Republican ally in the Senate that he temporarily reopen closed parts of the government to allow resumption of negotiations on a funding standoff.
As he left the White House for a trip to Louisiana, Mr Trump told reporters he did not agree with Republican Senator Lindsey Graham's proposal to reopen the government for three weeks.
If talks fail during that period, Graham said on Sunday, then Trump could go ahead and declare a national emergency to bypass Congress and get money for a wall on the US-Mexico border.
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