Washington – After Pelosi Asks Trump To Delay State Of Union Speech Over Shutdown, President Denies Aircraft For Foreign Trip

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    Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi responds to a question from the news media during her weekly press conference in the US Capitol in Washington, DC, USA, 17 January 2019. EPAWashington – It took President Donald Trump one day to flex his executive power back at House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, denying her an aircraft for a planned trip abroad in apparent response to her attempt to delay his State of Union address amid their government shutdown clash.

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    The nation’s two most powerful leaders appeared to be engaged in a game of Constitutional one-upmanship, as negotiations to end the 4-week stalemate failed to produce results.

    In a letter to Pelosi on Thursday, Trump said that due to the shutdown a trip to Egypt, Brussels and Afghanistan would be delayed, declaring: “In light of the 800,000 great American workers not receiving pay, I’m sure you would agree that postponing this public relations event is totally appropriate.”

    While the shutdown dragged on, the State Department on Thursday instructed all U.S. diplomats in Washington and elsewhere to return to work next week with pay, saying it had found money for their salaries at least temporarily despite the ongoing government shutdown.

    In a notice to staff posted online and sent to employees, the department said it had found money to pay most of its employees beginning Sunday or Monday for their next pay period. They will not be paid for time worked since the shutdown began in December until the situation is resolved, said the notice, which was signed by William Todd, the deputy undersecretary of state for management.

    It was not immediately clear where the money was found, but the department said it would use “existing funds as well as other available fiscal authorities to shift existing balances to restart payroll funding.”

    Salaries cannot be guaranteed beyond the next pay period, which ends on Feb. 14, if the shutdown does not end by then, the department said. However, it said it would “review its balances and available legal authorities to see if other flexibilities may be available.”

    The department said it was taking the step because it had become clear that the lapse in funding is harming essential diplomatic and national security objectives.

    “While the department has done its best to address matters essential to achieving U.S. national security and foreign policy objectives during the ongoing lapse, it has become clear as the lapse has continued to historic lengths that we need our full team to address the myriad critical issues requiring U.S. leadership around the globe and to fulfill our commitments to the American people,” it said.

    It added that the department’s leadership was “deeply concerned” about the financial hardships faced by its employees.

    Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had raised eyebrows among the U.S. diplomatic corps last week when he proclaimed that morale at the State Department was “good” despite the shutdown and the fact that 40 percent of its employees in the U.S. and nearly 23 percent overseas had been furloughed and the rest were working without pay.

    His comments also touched a nerve as he said he planned to go ahead with a previously scheduled conference of all U.S. ambassadors in Washington this week despite the funding constraints affecting employees.

    Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan announced the return to work with pay instructions to that conference on Thursday and was greeted with two rounds of sustained applause, according to one diplomat who was present.

    Outside the State Department other agencies continued to operate under the shutdown constraints.

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says President Donald Trump has yet to respond to her request that he postpone his State of the Union address until the government is reopened so workers can be paid for providing security for the grand Washington tradition.

    “We haven’t heard — very silent,” she told reporters on Thursday. “Let’s get a date when government is open. Let’s pay the employees. Maybe he thinks it’s OK not to pay people who do work. I don’t.”

    The president’s planned Jan. 29 address became a potential casualty of the four-week partial government shutdown after the Democratic leader cited concerns about whether the hobbled government can provide adequate security. Republicans cast Pelosi’s move as a ploy to deny Trump the stage.

    Trump declined to address the stalemate over the speech Thursday during a visit to the Pentagon, simply promising that the nation will have “powerful, strong border security.”

    The uncertainty surrounding the annual address also underscored the unraveling of ceremonial norms and niceties in Trump’s Washington, amid the shutdown over the president’s demand for money to build a U.S.-Mexico border wall. The impasse is draining the finances of hundreds of thousands of federal employees going without paychecks.

    Pelosi reiterated she is more than willing to negotiate money for border security once the government is reopened, but she said Democrats remain opposed to Trump’s long-promised wall, one of his signature campaign promises.

    “I’m not for a wall,” Pelosi said twice, mouthing the statement a third time for effect.

    Pressure on Trump intensified, as lawmakers from both parties scrambled for solutions. The shutdown, already the longest ever, entered its 27th day Thursday.

    While Trump’s own advisers said the shutdown was proving a greater drag on the economy than expected, Trump showed no signs of backing off a fight that he views as vital for his core supporters.
    Trump's letter to Pelosi


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    46 Comments
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    5 years ago

    That’s politics at its best. So far, Trump has volunteered to compromise. Pelosi stubbornly refused.

    Bezalel
    Bezalel
    5 years ago

    I admire his focus.

    5 years ago

    the President staid in Washington the whole month of December and so far 17 days in January – skipped his Holiday vacation – didn’t play any Golf (like you know who) – all to get the proper funding for the U.S. Gov’t to continue functioning and get the proper “security” for the southern border.

    But the DemocRATS run by Pelosi & Schumer are enjoying life and REFUSE to negotiate, not only with the President but even with their own party.

    Very many Democrat Congressmen & women will start negotiating with the President and re-open the Shutdown – then she’ll have to be “replaced” as Mrs. Speaker

    Phineas
    Phineas
    5 years ago

    They should just have a duel

    ralph1527
    ralph1527
    5 years ago

    This is really sick .Throw them all out !!!

    qazxc
    qazxc
    5 years ago

    What a dealmaker! What a genius! So Putzadential!

    achassidisheyid
    achassidisheyid
    5 years ago

    Is there someone still working the the White House that can tell him he graduated 3rd grade 65 years ago?

    puppydogs
    puppydogs
    5 years ago

    Love it, this President is awesome!!!

    puppydogs
    puppydogs
    5 years ago

    She belongs in the country negotiating with the president not out on some field trip. It’s bad enough her people were partying in Puerto Rico while millions of people went without a pay check.

    achassidisheyid
    achassidisheyid
    5 years ago

    Can some of you stable genuis acolytes please explain to me why the Republicans could not fund a wall during the two years when they were in the majority in both houses of Congress, the orange putz was president and the supreme court had two new conservative members added. Was all this Nancy’s fault, too. Or Obama. Or hillary. Why was the wall not funded from Jan 21 2016 until now?

    Cixelsyd_Wnosanoy
    Cixelsyd_Wnosanoy
    5 years ago

    Trump is acting infantile about the Pelosi trip…and most here are populist lemmings.

    Much of what is posted here is both embarrassing and a stark example of what happens when a community eschews higher education in the social sciences. It is for good reason that study of the social sciences is mandatory for cadets at all four military academies (Army; Air Force; Navy; and Coast Guard).

    triumphinwhitehouse
    triumphinwhitehouse
    5 years ago

    he is as always right.

    Buchwalter
    Buchwalter
    5 years ago

    Many of you should be thrown out of this country. Demorats, Obumu and nothing but insults are the signs that that person unable to muster an intelligent argument uses insults to make an argument a sure sign of low I.Q.

    puppydogs
    puppydogs
    5 years ago

    She just got schooled by the president once again. He owns her.

    ayinglefunadorf
    ayinglefunadorf
    5 years ago

    1000’s of people dont have enough money for Medicine. We need Medicare for ALL, not a WALL.

    5 years ago

    Trump couldnt get the wall passed in 2016-2018 because he didnt have the 60 votes need to pass in the senate.

    5 years ago

    Let her fly by commercial aircraft as the other 99.9% of the public has to. Let her be frisked by the TSA, and see how she likes it. Her trip is nothing but a public relations junket, paid by the taxpayers. FEH!!

    5 years ago

    The REAL FACTS are that it takes 60 votes to pass a bill in the senate.

    Recently, the rules were changed to only need a 51 vote majority for certain exceptions like supreme court nominations and “budget recouncilation” ( Obamacare act).

    All other bills still need 60 votes to pass.

    You can google it yourself.

    5 years ago

    To clarify: most bills require 60 votes to be fillibuster proof.

    You can google that also.

    Mark Levin
    Mark Levin
    5 years ago

    The Democrats need to realize this isn’t about a cc construction project, this is about NATIONAL SECURITY!