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Trump accepts deal for temporary end to painful shutdown

bbc.com

46 points by 105e9 7 years ago · 57 comments

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mfoy_ 7 years ago

The summary of his speech was:

Government will re-open through to Feb 15th.

Back pay will be paid ASAP.

He spoke about the wall for quite a while.

If congress doesn't agree to fund his wall, he will shut the government back down on Feb 15th.

  • the_gastropod 7 years ago

    I feel like I've repeatedly been proven wrong when I have these kinds of thoughts, but surely, he can't be stupid enough to try this stunt again. After 35 days of hurting people, he got nothing. He must realize shutting the government down to try to force his will is counter-productive, right?

    • mfoy_ 7 years ago

      So, before he announced the details of the re-opening, he said that many of the furloughed employees strongly supported him and that many even encouraged him to continue the shutdown. He's living in his own version of reality.

      • syspec 7 years ago

        I agree he is, but on the other hand those furloughed employees will receive back pay so an even more prolonged shutdown is essentially a paid vacation for the ones who have some savings.

        So I’m sure /those/ employees might encourage a shutdown, but it isn’t because they believe in his cause

        • mfoy_ 7 years ago

          You're not wrong, but that's a very charitable interpretation.

          The furloughed employees aren't actually guaranteed back-pay. Additionally, the ones who are deemed "essential" just have to work for free or quit.

          • votepaunchy 7 years ago

            > The furloughed employees aren't actually guaranteed back-pay.

            The bill approving back-pay for the just-concluded shutdown also covers the remainder of the fiscal year (through September).

            • kuhhk 7 years ago

              Wait, so does that mean pay would be ensured in the case of another shutdown?

        • scarface74 7 years ago

          With the widely reported stats that most Americans can’t handle a $400 emergency, you can’t have too much of a “vacation” when you are worried about your bills.

    • ignoramceisblis 7 years ago

      Negotiations fail to come to a close due to both parties, not one party. Saying one party is "stupid", has been "hurting people" and "got nothing" is far from the full picture. Both sides are attempting to "force [their] will".

      What may seem reasonable to one party may seem unreasonable to the other, whether or not either party shows it outwardly.

      • the_gastropod 7 years ago

        Ahhhh, the classic "Both sides"ism. Both sides are not responsible for this. One party is almost exclusively at fault (in fact, 2 men are almost entirely responsible: Mitch McConnell and Donald Trump). The "deal" the President just made is the same deal the Democrats proposed 35 days ago. It's the same bill the Senate passed unanimously in December. Mitch McConnell refused to have a vote on the bill, because Donald wouldn't sign it. Do not, for a second, pretend both sides are at all equally responsible for this mess.

      • mfoy_ 7 years ago

        Yes and no. In this case, Trump is basically holding government hostage. If congress doesn't want a wall, he cannot force a wall on them.

        EDIT: Better yet, according to that logic, a mugging is just a failed negotiation. If the victim was just more forthcoming with their money, it wouldn't have been a problem!

        • 64738 7 years ago

          But the congressional/democrat leaders are on record from just a few years discussing the importance of border security including barriers. Now that Trump wants that, too, even the idea of doing so is considered immoral.

          For a lot of people (obviously, not all, and I have no clue as to a percentage), it really has absolutely zero to do a wall or barrier, and it is completely about thwarting the president. The behavior of both parties is starting to disgust me.

          • alphabettsy 7 years ago

            I think his rhetoric has a lot to do with how people view it now. But the funding that you’re talking about to repair and expand existing barriers was already used and the barrier exists to my knowledge. Dems also offered billions for immigration and border security that he rejected because he specifically wants a wall, despite the fact that it won’t have the greatest impact which is visa overstays.

            • ramblerouser 7 years ago

              Democrats dont want to stop visa overstays either (they want to abolish ICE), so how is that an argument against the wall?

    • Supermancho 7 years ago

      Ironically, this is the check in the balance of the three branches. The Congress and The President must agree on a budget. It's sad that political game theory supersedes common sense planning ahead, but turning it around to "forcing will" mischaracterizes the propriety of the system. One day the US will evolve into a proper parliamentary system, but that should be shortly after we get instant binding political polls and have people born on mars (give or take 100+ years).

      Anything he wants to spend on a wall, take from the military. If you're gonna spend it, shuffle it.

      • the_gastropod 7 years ago

        The Senate can override the President's veto with a 2/3rds vote. As a reminder, the bill passed with a 100-0 vote in December, so this was absolutely doable.

    • krapp 7 years ago

      He's a narcissist. He believes he's winning a war of attrition and that the public is overwhelmingly on his side, with polls or news to the contrary just being more liberal "fake news."

      • scarface74 7 years ago

        What’s amazing is that even conservative news outlets like Fox are saying the polls are against him and he still won’t believe it.

    • bdcravens 7 years ago

      I haven't read it. What does "The Art of the Deal" say about negotiating in a lose-lose situation?

      Though giving in on the wall may actually be his best chance of being reelected (spend the next 22 months spinning a narrative that he tried and blocked by mean ole Congress)

    • phillipcarter 7 years ago

      This assumes he has the ability to self reflect, which by this point is clearly not the case

    • cmiles74 7 years ago

      "There's no education in the second kick of the mule."

    • towaway1138 7 years ago

      I was thinking just that about the Democrats.

      • happytoexplain 7 years ago

        I can see arguments for "it's all Trump", "it's mostly Trump", and "the difference in 'fault' isn't meaningfully large", but I can't see an argument for "it's all/mostly Democrats". Can you elaborate?

        Edit: I'm not being snide, I'm actually ignorant.

        • 64738 7 years ago

          I am, too, but I would say the easiest argument to make for that case is that he eventually came around to offering them things they wanted, and a reduction of what he wanted. But, Pelosi and others simply hate him so much that they are willing to flip their position on the wall issue 180 degrees from where they were just a few years ago in order to spite him. Both sides need to be willing to compromise.

  • ceejayoz 7 years ago

    In other words, exactly what the Schumer bill voted down yesterday proposed, with an additional week added on.

  • donavanm 7 years ago

    Im confused here. I thought “the shutdown” was wholly due to congress having the sole authority for funding federal bodies. How does that settle with “he will shut the government back down”?

    • rjohnk 7 years ago

      By law, the executive branch can't spend more money that what has been appropriated, so in theory any president has to "shut the government down"

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antideficiency_Act

      This is all subject to interpretation, mind you.

    • Supermancho 7 years ago

      He has made a deal to not agree to the budget, but to fund the non-essential (tm) parts of the government as if one (unseen) has been agreed to...or some other sort of shenanigans.

    • alphabettsy 7 years ago

      The president can veto unless they have enough votes to override?

  • huy-nguyen 7 years ago

    I think the 3-week thing is just a face-saving measure to allow Trump to back down and everyone involved will conveniently "forgets" about it in 3 weeks' time. Surely with the current breaking news cycle, will we even remember the shutdown in 3 weeks? If you don't believe me, come back to this comment in 3 weeks to see if I'm right.

    • ceejayoz 7 years ago

      They can't just forget about it. A permanent bill has to pass the House and Senate, and Trump has to sign it (or get overridden, which definitely won't accomplish the "face-saving" thing). Otherwise, the government shuts down again.

      • Nerdfest 7 years ago

        You say that like reality is a significant factor in many people's decisions.

    • subculture 7 years ago

      Presumably, it will also get him his venue back for the State of the Union address.

yingw787 7 years ago

Top comment on New York Times says this is deflection from the Roger Stone indictment. I think it's likely this is true, since he didn't get anything solid politically. He might let the government shut down again and pull the same rabbit out the hat next time Mueller issues an indictment.

On a related note, one article I really enjoyed a few months back was the decreasing relevance of the nation-state in an era of prolonged peace. It seems like solid logic: power cannot exist where it is not regularly exercised, and in an era of conflict and deadlock power can be exercised most at the local level, where the error kernel is smaller.

https://aeon.co/essays/the-end-of-a-world-of-nation-states-m...

mfoy_ 7 years ago

Off-topic, but damn HN... I submitted the CNBC and CBSNews versions of this. One got zero up-votes, and the other got flagged.

  • detaro 7 years ago

    Not surprising, given this is the perfect example of the "If they'd cover it on TV news, it's probably off-topic." rule?

  • ceejayoz 7 years ago

    Now this one's flagged. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • mfoy_ 7 years ago

      Oh well, I can see why HN wouldn't want every passing Trump scandal to show up on the front page, but this is pretty big.

    • craftyguy 7 years ago

      Yea it's off topic. It belongs on reddit, not HN.

  • kikoreis 7 years ago

    I think the BBC is pretty well regarded on HN; I can recall seeing many posts on the front page.

jdhn 7 years ago

So if he's going to shut the government down on the 15th (because the wall isn't getting funded), what's the point of reopening it? His base will be ticked off, that's for sure.

  • krapp 7 years ago

    >His base will be ticked off, that's for sure.

    His base wants the wall, fully funded, and no quarter given to the Democrats or their agenda. His base also believes government is corrupt, bloated, wasteful and infested with leftists and globalist elites. This is exactly what his base wants.

    • mfoy_ 7 years ago

      There's also a non-trivial percentage that love "liberal tears" and enjoy things like this that are petty and / or spiteful.

    • cannonedhamster 7 years ago

      His base includes a number of people voted into office. It's really kind of odd that they can't even trust when their own party has the entirety of government. I don't understand why people dislike any government, yet don't like if you call them anarchists either. The arguments aren't consistent. The odd thing is most people do not disagree with a wall in places that make sense. A wall for a wall's sake is just pointless. I'd rather put that into tools or manpower (or heaven forbid pay increases). A single drone with heat vision could scan entire sectors, be controlled remotely and wouldn't require using eminent domain. Also it couldn't be dug out, cut down, or climbed over or through. As General Patton is quoted to have said "fixed fortifications are a monument to the stupidity of man".

      • krapp 7 years ago

        The wall doesn't make sense from a practical standpoint - there isn't enough illegal immigration over the southern border to justify billions of dollars to wall it off entirely, where existing security measures and changes in immigration policy might have a better effect.

        It does, however, make sense as a symbol of right-wing xenophobia and populist defiance against globalism. If Trump's supporters are focused on the wall, maybe they won't notice any of the other promises he's not keeping.

  • bradlys 7 years ago

    Look at his approval ratings by party. Republicans are not that upset by his actions.

    https://news.gallup.com/poll/203198/presidential-approval-ra...

  • protomyth 7 years ago

    His base wants their tax returns paid. I get the feeling the date wasn't selected out of thin air.

  • maccio92 7 years ago

    Full back pay off all work done during the shut down for now

  • JohnTHaller 7 years ago

    Likely to counter the news of Roger Stone being indicted.

kevintb 7 years ago

Why is this flagged?

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