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President Donald Trump Urged To Reschedule His State Of The Union Address

President Donald Trump Urged To Reschedule His State Of The Union Address
  • PublishedJanuary 17, 2019

U.S House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Wednesday urged President Donald Trump to reschedule his State of the Union address with the government shutdown which is now on its 26th day.

Pelosi wrote him a letter citing security concerns because the Secret Service, which is required to provide security for the address, has not received funding during the dispute.

Trump’s address is set for Jan. 29.

The standoff was triggered by Trump’s demand for a round of funding for his promised wall on the U.S.-Mexico border. Congressional Democrats are opposed.

Presidents traditionally deliver the address, which lays out the administration’s goals for the upcoming year, in the House of Representatives chamber before a joint session of Congress and the majority of the Cabinet.

Democrats took control of the House after last November’s congressional elections. During the shutdown, Trump has routinely blamed them for the stalemate, although he had earlier said he would take responsibility.

Pelosi, speaking to reporters, suggested that if Trump would not agree to reschedule the speech until the government reopens, he could deliver it from the Oval Office instead, a setting that would lack the grandeur of a congressional address.

The White House had no immediate comment on Pelosi’s request, and her letter appeared to have taken aides by surprise. It pointed out that she had invited Trump to make the State of the Union address at the Capitol but said the shutdown complicated the situation.

“Sadly, given the security concerns and unless government re-opens this week, I suggest we work together to determine another suitable date after government has re-opened for this address or for you to consider delivering your State of the Union address in writing to the Congress,” Pelosi wrote.

In response, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said on Twitter her department and the Secret Service were prepared to handle a presidential speech at the Capitol.

Representative Jim Jordan of the House Freedom Caucus, a group of conservative Republicans allied to Trump, said Pelosi’s move showed Democrats were “more focused on stopping the president than they are on serving the country.”

Both sides sought to ratchet up the pressure over the longest government shutdown in U.S. history.

Democratic senators huddled on the outdoor steps leading to the Senate in 39-degree (3.9-C) weather, holding large photographs of constituents furloughed by the shutdown or otherwise affected by it.

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said Trump “is using these men and women as pawns. Using them in an extortion game saying: ‘I am going to hurt these people unless I get my way.’”

At the same time, the president hosted a bipartisan group of House members to discuss finding a solution to the impasse. White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said the meeting was constructive.

Democratic members who met with Trump said they called on him to end the shutdown and then talk about the issues dividing them.

“Our singular message was we’ve got to reopen the government and then in good faith we can have negotiations,” Representative Dean Phillips told reporters.

At mid-afternoon, a group of freshman House Democrats crossed the Capitol to deliver a letter to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s office, “asking him to exercise his power and bring our bills to a vote” that would fund the government and reopen it, said Representative Susie Lee of Nevada.

“All of us are willing to talk about negotiating, but we want to see people get paid for the work that they’re doing” for the government, Lee said.

A handful of Republican senators, including Lindsey Graham and Lisa Murkowski, were circulating a bipartisan draft letter to Trump asking him to support a measure that would reopen the government for three weeks while they work on funding legislation that would address his concerns about border security.

A Democrat who signed the letter, Chris Coons, said it would not be sent unless a substantial amount of Republicans supported it.

Trump on Wednesday signed legislation that would ensure 800,000 federal employees will receive back pay when the government reopens.

Some government employees are being asked to return to work after being initially told to stay home during the shutdown, although they will not be paid on schedule.

Funding for the federal courts will run out next week because of the shutdown, Bob Carlson, president of the American Bar Association, which represents more than 400,000 lawyers, said on Wednesday, urging the administration and Congress to reach a compromise and restore funding to the federal judiciary.

“Immigration courts, which have no current funding and are already dealing with an 800,000-case backlog, have canceled more than 42,000 hearings, forcing people who have waited years for justice to wait even longer,” Carlson said in a statement.

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