Trump ‘tantrum’ threatens US government shutdown

Blazing row in front of the world’s media gave a preview of the stormy future facing the president

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An angry Donald Trump told Democratic leaders at the White House on Tuesday that he will shut down the US government because they refuse to approve billions of dollars in funding for his controversial Mexico border wall.

The US president and top opposition congressional leaders had been meant to hold a reassuring Oval Office photo op. Instead, their blazing row in front of the world’s media gave a preview of the stormy future facing Mr Trump as legal scandals mount and his Republican party gives up its once total control of Congress.

Chuck Schumer, the senior Democrat in the still Republican-dominated Senate, and Nancy Pelosi, who is likely to become speaker in the newly Democrat-controlled House of Representatives in January, bluntly told Mr Trump that he had no chance of getting the US$5 billion (Dh18.4bn) that he wants for the wall.

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Mr Trump doubled down on earlier threats to retaliate by refusing to sign a federal spending bill required by December 21 to avoid leaving large parts of the government without funding.

“Yes, if we don’t get what we want one way or the other... I will shut down the government,” he said. “I am proud to shut down the government for border security.”

Mr Schumer objected, while Ms Pelosi suggested that the debate shouldn’t take place in front of journalists.

But Mr Trump, whose US-Mexico wall idea was at the centre of his 2016 election victory, could not control his irritation.

Taking out two memo cards, he read off figures that he said showed a near end to illegal immigration at portions of the border already featuring high fences.

“It’s been very effective,” he said.

Ms Pelosi parried that the statistics were incorrect.

“What the president is representing [with] his cards over there are not facts. We have to have an evidence-based conversation about what does work and what money has been spent and how effective it is,” Ms Pelosi said.

Outside the White House afterwards, Mr Schumer was even more scathing about Mr Trump.

“This temper tantrum that he seems to throw will not get him his wall and it will hurt a lot of people,” he said.

Ms Pelosi was quoted by US media as telling fellow Democrats in Congress that Trump’s wall push was “like a manhood thing for him, as if manhood could ever be associated with him”.

But Mr Trump later played down the scene, saying the meeting had been “very friendly” and that he “respects them both”.

Tweeting before the White House meeting, Mr Trump claimed that the wall was needed to prevent “large scale crime and disease” brought by illegal immigrants.

The issue is popular with his political base, which wants radically tighter controls at the southern border, a magnet for impoverished Central Americans fleeing gang violence and seeking work in the United States.

Opponents say the wall is not only a waste of money but has been used by the president to whip up xenophobia.

Mr Trump, who leads chants of "Build the wall" at campaign rallies, has been frustrated in the first two years of his administration. Now, as the government funding deadline approaches, both sides will have to decide whether to blink.

After the meeting, Mr Trump insisted that he would hold firm.

“I don’t mind owning that issue,” he said. “If we have to close down the country over border security I actually like that.”

Mr Trump said earlier on Tuesday that he could even order the military to do the work if Congress refused to fund construction – although it was not clear whether he had the authority.

Washington has been paralysed by political gridlock for most of Mr Trump’s two years in office and the partisan divide is set to intensify in January when Democrats take over the House majority.

The power shift comes as Mr Trump faces ever-growing peril from criminal investigations, with talk growing of possible impeachment proceedings against the president.