White House budget director Mick Mulvaney declined to say Sunday whether President …
Mulvaney downplays talk of government shutdown over border wall funding
Now Playing Mick Mulvaney on looming budget deadline, ObamaCare repeal
White House budget director Mick Mulvaney declined to
say Sunday whether President Trump will insist Congress include money
for his border wall in his proposed 2018 budget or risk a government
shutdown.
“We don’t know yet,” Mulvaney, director of the White
House Office of Management and Budget, said on “Fox News Sunday.” “I’m
not going to negotiate with you on national television. We will
negotiate with the Democrats.”
Congress has until Friday to pass the budget to keep
the federal government from technically running out of money, which
would result in a shutdown of non-essential services.
Mulvaney reiterated Sunday that one of Trump’s
biggest presidential campaign platforms was national security, which
included building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.
“I don’t think anyone thinks a shutdown is desirable,” Mulvaney said.
However, he wouldn’t say whether Trump would risk a
politically unpopular shutdown to get his way. And he suggested that
Democrats would be to blame because of their demands on an ObamaCare
overhaul plan in exchange for border wall funding in the budget.
“We are asking for our priorities,” Mulvaney told Fox
News. “I would say is that they’re holding hostage national security.
Again, something they’ve supported in the recent past when President
Obama was in the Senate. So we don’t understand why this is breaking
down like this.”
Meanwhile, Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly
suggested earlier Sunday on CNN that Trump would “insist” on the border
wall funding.
Mulvaney also said Sunday that members of Congress,
returning Monday from a roughly two-week recess, are working on the
budget “as we speak” and that members could pass it and a revised
ObamaCare overhaul plan within the next seven days.
“We don’t see any structural reason the House and Senate cannot do both things in a week,” he said.
He also said that if House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., has the votes in the GOP-controlled chamber, Ryan will hold a vote.
However, Ryan continues to say that passing a budget is the top priority this week.
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