Just over a week after President Trump
forcefully suggested
he'd risk a government shutdown to secure border wall funding, the
White House is now signaling a retreat -- and top conservative
commentators and politicians are declaring that the president's
"gutless" move has not only broken a campaign promise, but
also undermined his credibility as a dealmaker.
"Trump will just
have been a joke presidency who scammed the American people, amused the
populists for a while, but he’ll have no legacy whatsoever" if he yields
on the issue, columnist Ann Coulter told The Daily Caller in a
podcast. (Within hours of those critical comments, Trump's
official Twitter account stopped following Coulter's.)
And House
Freedom Caucus Chair Mark Meadows, R-N.C., told Fox News late Wednesday
that "the political fallout will start" soon and that Trump risks
doing “major damage” to his re-election effort in 2020.
When asked
if the president should veto any stopgap funding bill that does not
include money for the border wall, Meadows replied “yes.” He added that
the "mistake" Republicans had made was that "we didn’t bring up the bill
last week when we had the votes."
Conservatives' dire rhetoric
comes as the White House makes an apparent about-face on the issue of
border wall funding just hours before a Friday deadline to pass a
spending bill that will keep the federal government operational.
"I
am proud to shut down the government for border security ... because
the people of this country don't want criminals and people that have
lots of problems and drugs pouring into our country," Trump said in an
explosive White House meeting with
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and House Minority Leader
Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., on Dec. 11. "So, I will take the mantle. I will
be the one to shut it down."
But in tweets on Wednesday, the
president softened his rhetoric, saying the wall would get funded "one
way or the other." And Senate Republicans introduced a stopgap funding
measure without the $5 billion in border wall money Trump had previously
requested, even as members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus
said they were exploring options to include the funding.
The shift on the issue would not be the president's first this year. In March,
Trump vowed
after signing a $1.3 trillion spending bill with a warning: "I say to
Congress: I will never sign another bill like this again." In September,
Trump wrote on Twitter on the importance funding the wall, "REPUBLICANS
MUST FINALLY GET TOUGH!"
"Well, I’m not going to sugarcoat it,"
conservative commentator Michelle Malkin told "Fox & Friends" on
Wednesday. "I’m not going to spin it. I wish I could but I can’t. This
is a cave. This was a blink."
Malkin slammed Senate Majority
Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., saying he "has been in office since 1984
and has never been able to get this deal done because he is afraid of a
shutdown."
"Trump will just have been a joke presidency who scammed the American people."
— Ann Coulter
She
added: "But now look at what the White House is forced to do: scrounge
around for $600 million in the defense budget in order to fund a puny
100 miles? As if border security is an afterthought?"
The Senate on Wednesday night passed a stopgap measure to continue funding the government and avert a shutdown later this week.
MCCONNELL ANNOUNCES NEW STOPGAP FUNDING MEASURE WITHOUT BORDER WALL ALLOCATION
Speaking
to Fox News' "Your World" on Wednesday, incoming House Majority Leader
Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said McConnell would not have introduced the measure
without the White House's blessing.
But Hoyer said the stopgap
legislation was akin to "punting the ball down the road a bit" and
merely delayed an eventual showdown on border wall funding.
Meadows, R-N.C., wrote on Twitter that the move was a "Christmas present" and a "Valentine's Day gift" to Democrats.
"Punting
to Feb. 8 on a CR not only gives Democrats a Christmas present, it
offers them a Valentine’s Day gift," Meadows wrote. "Democrats will win,
the wall will not be built, and Congress will once again have punted
when we should’ve been taking a stand. The time to fight is now. Zero
excuse."
And Ohio Republican Rep. Jim Jordan suggested the delay would only hurt Republicans' chances of seeing the wall funded.
Kellyanne
Conway, counselor to the president, insisted on “Fox & Friends”
Wednesday morning that Trump isn’t “softening” his position on funding
for the wall, though, and emphasized it’s up to Congress to present a
deal to the president.
“He has a responsibility to keep the
government moving forward and he has a responsibility to get border
security,” said Conway. “If he could do it by himself – he would’ve done
it already.”
Without a resolution, more than 800,000 government
workers could be furloughed or sent to work without pay, disrupting
government operations.
For his part, Trump on Wednesday suggested
he had kept his campaign promise for Mexico to pay for the wall, because
the country's new trilateral trade pact with the U.S. and Canada would
result in "far more money coming to the U.S."
But Coulter wasn't buying those explanations,
telling The Daily Caller that if no border wall funding is secured, the broader consequences for conservatives will be devastating.
Coulter, one of the few commentators
to correctly predict Trump's rise to the presidency
early in the 2016 presidential primary season, suggested "no Republican
will ever be elected president again" if Trump ultimately backs down.
In a
column Wednesday, conservative pundit Ben Shaprio similarly characterized Trump's apparent capitulation as "gutless."
"This marks a serious shift from the escalating tenor of President Trump’s statements on the issue," Shapiro wrote.
Democratic
leaders have faced intra-party dissent over apparent border wall
capitulations as well this year. In January, Schumer was slammed as a
"coward" by fellow progressives after he forced a government shutdown by
insisting that any temporary spending bill to keep the government fully
operational include permanent protections for the so-called DREAMers --
immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. Schumer
backed off just days later in exchange for Republican promises to
consider the matter in the future.
"It’s a pretty gutless move for
the administration to back down from a fight over the wall after
revving up Republicans for precisely that fight – especially since back
in January, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer was forced to back down
from his own shutdown attempt while trying to push President Trump to
grant amnesty to so-called DREAMers," Shapiro continued.
House
Freedom Caucus spokesman Darin Miller told Fox News early Wednesday that
the group of conservatives will try to amend any spending bill so it
funds the border wall, saying they "see this as the last real chance" to
try and keep their promise on the issue.