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Government shutdown, Day 6: No sign White House, Congress any closer to ending impasse

Government shutdown, Day 6: No sign White House, Congress any closer to ending impasse https://www.gannett-cdn.com/-mm-/0a61c4e4ea2a396ea07b0bbaf2ff363f8210615c/c=0-121-1384-903/local/-/media/2018/12/23/USATODAY/USATODAY/636811791999871309-DIP010.JPG?width=3200&height=1680&fit=crop

Government shutdown, Day 6: No sign White House, Congress any closer to ending impasse


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Some federal employees affected by the partial government shutdown are facing uncertainty as they return to work after the Christmas holiday. About 420,000 who are considered essential are working unpaid. (Dec. 26)
AP

WASHINGTON – A partial government shutdown entered its sixth day  Thursday with no sign that Congress and the White House are any closer to ending their standoff.

The Senate is scheduled to return to work for the first time since Saturday but has scheduled no votes, signaling that little, if any, progress has been made toward resolving the budget impasse that shut down a quarter of the federal government.

The House also is scheduled to return to work Thursday but  scheduled just a brief session, planning no votes.

Leaders of both chambers promised to give members 24 hours’ notice before they must return to Washington for votes.

President Donald Trump shows no sign of backing down from his demand for funding for a wall along the nation’s southern border.

“Whatever it takes,” Trump said Wednesday when asked how long the shutdown could last.

The president followed that up Thursday afternoon with tweets criticizing the "Democrats OBSTRUCTION of the desperately needed wall."

His tweet referred to Democrats blocking "350 great people wanting & expecting to come into Government," presumably a reference to presidential nominees the Republican-led Senate has yet to confirm.

“We need a wall,” he said Wednesday in Iraq, where he and first lady Melania Trump made a surprise visit to U.S. troops. “We need safety for our country. Even from this standpoint. We have terrorists coming in through the southern border.”

Trump said he planned on “going to the wall” early next year for a “groundbreaking” before the State of the Union address in January.

Border wall funding has been at the center of a budget dispute that  has shut down nine federal departments and several smaller agencies since Saturday, forcing about 800,000 federal employees to go on furlough or work without pay.

Trump demanded $5 billion for the border wall, although he insisted repeatedly during his presidential campaign that he’d make Mexico pay for the structure.

Congressional Democrats refuse to give him the funding, arguing that a wall would be ineffective and a waste of money.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., who is likely to become speaker when Democrats regain the majority in January, told USA TODAY over the weekend that if the government was not reopened over the holiday, Democrats will approve a bill to do so when they take control.

That legislation is unlikely to meet the president's demands for wall funding, but it is possible it would pass the Senate. It is unclear whether Trump would sign the legislation.

The head of a union that represents thousands of federal workers took aim at Trump on Wednesday, accusing him of gambling with the lives of federal workers and rebuking him for claiming that many federal employees want the government to remain closed until the wall funding is approved.

"We have not heard from a single member who supports the president’s inaction," said Paul Shearon, president of the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers. "Most view this as an act of ineptitude."

Trump should be concerned about the impact the shutdown has on the morale of federal employees, but instead he treats them like "a chip on a giant poker table," Shearon said.

"If the president wants to gamble, perhaps he should go back to running casinos," Shearon said. "A casino is where it’s commonplace for chips to be tossed around. Gambling with the lives of federal workers is not acceptable."

Contributing: Eliza Collins, John Fritze

More: How your holiday travel plans will be impacted by the partial federal government shutdown

More: The government shutdown is here. How does it affect you?

More: Government shutdown, day 3: Trump complains he's 'all alone' waiting for Democrats to deal

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