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Former US president Donald Trump delivering a speech in Washington on September 15, 2023. Photo: Reuters

Trump urges US government shutdown in unlikely bid to ‘defund’ his criminal prosecutions

  • The US government will shut down on October 1 if Congress cannot reach a funding agreement
  • Donald Trump, who led a 35-day shutdown in 2019, suggested Republicans let it happen again
Donald Trump

Former US president Donald Trump has urged fellow Republicans in Congress to shut down the government to thwart the federal prosecutions against him, although any funding lapse was unlikely to stop the cases from being pursued.

Republicans in the US House of Representatives are at odds over how to proceed with spending legislation, which must be passed to avert an October 1 shutdown.

A small group of hardliners, including Trump’s most fervent supporters, have complicated the agenda for House Speaker Kevin McCarthy as he pushes a short-term funding plan.

“Republicans in Congress can and must defund all aspects of Crooked Joe Biden’s weaponized Government,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social media site late on Wednesday, calling it “the last chance to defund these political prosecutions against me and other Patriots”.

US House Speaker Kevin McCarthy. Photo: AP

The US Justice Department has previously said activities funded by “permanent indefinite appropriations” would continue during any funding lapse.

The looming shutdown marks the second time in recent months that the world’s top economy faces a financial gridlock.

Key dates for Trump, from courtrooms to campaign trail

In June, the United States narrowly avoided a possible debt default, as US senators voted to suspend the federal debt limit after weeks of fraught negotiations.

A default would have been unprecedented, but the United States has had periods of shutdown before, including a 35-day stretch from late 2018 to early 2019 under former president Donald Trump – the longest in US history.

The Special Counsel’s Office prosecuting Trump and his allies had no formal comment, but it is covered by “the permanent, indefinite appropriation for independent counsels,” according to its latest funding statement.

President Joe Biden’s re-election campaign accused Trump, the leading candidate by far in the 2024 Republican presidential nominating contest, of putting his own interests ahead of those of the country.

“Donald Trump is rooting for a government shutdown and couldn’t care less what it would mean for American families,” the campaign said in a statement. Biden, a Democrat, defeated Trump in 2020 and is seeking re-election in 2024.

Trump faces two federal trials, one tied to his attempts to overturn his 2020 loss, as he again seeks the presidency in the 2024 election, and the other over his handling of classified documents.

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Donald Trump, 18 others indicted in Georgia for alleged bid to overturn state election results

Donald Trump, 18 others indicted in Georgia for alleged bid to overturn state election results

New York and Georgia are also prosecuting him and a federal shutdown would not affect those cases.

The White House has stressed the independence of the Special Counsel’s Office.

Republicans and Democrats seized on Trump’s plea, with a Trump ally, US congressman Matt Gaetz, posting on X, formerly known as Twitter: “Trump Opposes the Continuing Resolution. Hold the Line.”

House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries wrote on X: “Trump ordered House Republicans to shutdown the government. These people are too extreme to ever be trusted”.

Additional reporting by Agence France-Presse

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