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The White House is shown during a partial shutdown of the federal government. Photo: Tribune News Service

Christmas is over, but President Trump’s government shutdown is just getting started

  • So far, the public and federal workers have largely been spared inconvenience and hardship because of the public holidays
  • Trump said the closed parts of the government will remain that way until Democrats agree to wall off the US-Mexico border
Donald Trump

Christmas has come and gone but the partial US government shutdown is just getting started.

Wednesday brings the first full business day after several government departments and agencies closed up over the weekend due to a budgetary stalemate between President Donald Trump and Congress. And there is no end in sight.

So far, the public and federal workers have largely been spared inconvenience and hardship because government is closed on weekends and federal employees were excused from work on Christmas Eve and Christmas, a federal holiday. The shutdown began at midnight last Friday.

Trump said on Tuesday that the closed parts of the government will remain that way until Democrats agree to wall off the US-Mexico border to deter criminal elements. He said he is open to calling the wall something else as long as he ends up with an actual wall.
US President Donald Trump speaks on the telephone as he answers calls from people calling into the NORAD Santa tracker phone line. He’s vowed he would not reopen the government until he gets US$5 billion to fund his border wall. Photo: AFP

Asked when the government would reopen fully, Trump said he could not say.

“I cannot tell you when the government’s going to be open. I can tell you it’s not going to be open until we have a wall or fence, whatever they’d like to call it,” Trump said, referring to Democrats who staunchly oppose walling off the border.

“I’ll call it whatever they want, but it’s all the same thing,” he told reporters after holding a holiday video conference with representatives from all five branches of the military stationed in Alaska, Bahrain, Guam and Qatar.

Trump argued that drug flows and human trafficking can only be stopped by a wall.

“We cannot do it without a barrier. We cannot do it without a wall,” he said. “The only way you’re going to do it is to have a physical barrier, meaning a wall. And if you don’t have that then we’re just not opening” the government.

Democrats oppose spending money on a wall, preferring instead to pump the dollars into fencing, technology and other means of controlling access to the border. Trump argued that Democrats oppose a wall only because he is for one.

The stalemate over how much to spend and how to spend it caused the partial government shutdown that began Saturday following a lapse in funding for departments and agencies that make up about 25 per cent of the government.

US President Donald Trump holds a video call with US military service members in the Oval Office on Christmas morning in Washington. Photo: Reuters

Some 800,000 government workers are affected. Many are on the job but must wait until after the shutdown to be paid again.

Trump claimed that many of these workers “have said to me and communicated, ‘stay out until you get the funding for the wall.’ These federal workers want the wall. The only one that doesn’t want the wall are the Democrats.”

Trump didn’t say how he is hearing from federal workers, excluding those he appointed to their jobs or who work with him in the White House. But many rank-and-file workers have gone to social media with stories of the financial hardship they expect to face because of the shutdown.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: shutdown in U.S. looks set to last
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