US government shutdown veteran analyses current crisis

Trump is winning with his base but I don't think he's winning in the public says former White House official


Afp December 29, 2018
The US government has been partially shut down since December 22, 2018 due to a dispute over funding for President Donald Trump's border wall. PHOTO: AFP

WASHINGTON: Patrick Griffin worked in the White House for Democratic president Bill Clinton and participated in negotiations with Republican lawmakers during the 1995 government shutdown - the longest in recent US history.

Now a professor at American University, Griffin analyses the current shutdown - sparked by a dispute over funding for President Donald Trump's controversial border wall - that has paralysed the American government since December 22.

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"This is going to be about 'who blinks first.' And when we did it in the '90s, we thought we had a better argument than they did, and it turns out we did. And they not only had to blink, and we got virtually everything we wanted, they also were damaged by it," Griffin said.

"Somebody will blink. Not in the too distant future."

"The reality is now nobody is paying much attention to it in the middle of the holidays ... but as the battle shifts to the more general public, I think the messaging on the Democratic side will be more aggressive," Griffin said.

"My guess is that Trump is winning with his base but I don't think he's winning in the public. But this can change. And then when the Democrats take control (of the House of Representatives in January), the fight takes on a different feel."

"I don't know where the deal is. I don't know whether it's in a few more bucks, or if Trump will be very creative. He has the potential. If he did something on DACA, I think the Democrats would give him the money. But that would unsettle his base," said Griffin, referring to a program that protects immigrants who came to the US illegally as children, which has sought to scrap.

"It's very tough. You make the decision and there's a lot of consideration that goes into the decision ... You do a very, very thorough analysis of what you're going to do and what they're going to do and you play it out as far as you can," Griffin said.

With no deal, US government shutdown likely to drag on past Christmas

"You don't want the president running around on his own, undermining it. And President Clinton has some inclination to do that, but he was able to be managed and as a result our discipline and our message prevailed ... Now, you never know with Trump."

"It is a constitutionally defined tension between the Congress and the executive branch. The executive branch proposes and the Congress disposes. So they have the power of the purse. And that is something that keeps the checks and balances in place, whether it looks messy, whether we like the issue or who's winning or losing," Griffin said.

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