Trump, who once said America needed a 'good' government shutdown, says he doesn't 'like the idea of shutdowns' as deadline looms
- President Donald Trump suggested to The Daily Caller that he would not force a government shutdown at the end of the month to secure more money for a promised wall along the US-Mexico border.
- "I don't like the idea of shutdowns," Trump said.
- Trump has previously threatened to shut down the government, saying the US "needs a good 'shutdown.'"
President Donald Trump suggested he wants no part of a government shutdown at the end of the month, despite previous threats to use a shutdown as leverage with Congress.
In an interview with The Daily Caller on Tuesday, Trump dismissed the idea of shutting down the government to extract more funding for the promised wall along the US-Mexico border.
"Well, I want to keep, I don't like the idea of shutdowns," Trump said.
The federal government will enter a shutdown at the end of September unless Congress passes a new funding bill.
The border wall was one of Trump's signature campaign promises and a focal point in previous government funding battles during the president's tenure. But Trump didn't seem willing to go to the shutdown option to get more money for the wall.
"Border security is a very important issue," the president said. "I don't see even myself or anybody else closing down the country right now."
In previous shutdown fights, Trump has repeatedly suggested that a shutdown could be beneficial to the country.
"Our country needs a good 'shutdown' in September to fix mess!" Trump tweeted in May 2017 after signing a short-term funding bill.
In March, Trump also threatened to veto the omnibus spending bill which would have plunged the government into another shutdown but gave in at the last minute. But while signing that bill, Trump also threatened to "never sign another bill like this again."
Part of Trump's problem with the previous omnibus spending bill, in addition to the slapdash nature of its passage, was the lack of funding for the border wall in the bill. While the measure included additional funding for border security, there were no funds to build a new wall.
In the Daily Caller interview, Trump claimed to have received $3.2 billion in funding for the border wall and said the administration has already "done a lot of work on the wall." But the previous funding bill allocated just $1.6 billion worth of funds for border security, which could only be used to secure existing fence.
Another $1.6 billion is in the Senate's proposed funding bill for fiscal year 2019, which starts in October, while the House is looking to allocate more. Those bills are not guaranteed to pass.
While Trump was reluctant to shut the government down over border funding at the end of the month, the president left the door open to a similar showdown in the future.
"I think that after midterms, we're going to have a very serious discussion because we want border security, we have to have it," Trump said. "It's going to be a big part of - it is a big part of this country. We have to have border security."