U.S. President Donald Trump cautioned congressional negotiators Wednesday they would be "wasting their time" if they don't consider funding for his proposed border wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, an issue that triggered a five-week partial government shutdown.
Trump's warning came via Twitter as a bipartisan panel of House and Senate lawmakers prepared to meet for the first time since the shutdown ended in an effort to reach a compromise over border security and avoid a second partial government closure.
The White House said Tuesday Trump wants to avert another shutdown but remains committed to erecting new barriers along the border, something most Democratic lawmakers still reject.
Federal agencies reopened this week after the longest shutdown in U.S. history, after Trump signed a stopgap three-week funding bill designed to give congressional negotiators a window to craft a package enhancing border security.
As the committee begins consultations Wednesday, the partisan fault line over border wall funding that sparked the shutdown persists.
"Democrats sharply disagree with the president on the need for an expensive and ineffective border wall," Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York said Tuesday.
"What I believe is, at any given place along the border, we've got to have some combination of three elements: physical barriers, technology, and personnel," Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn said. "So, we need a complement of each of those things in this border security bill that hopefully we'll be voting on in the coming weeks."
Earlier, Trump said he sees less than a 50 percent chance congressional negotiators will put together a deal acceptable to him.
The president told The Wall Street Journal Sunday he doubts he would accept less than the $5.7 billion in wall funding he has been demanding. He also cast doubt on granting permanent legal status to immigrants brought illegally to America as children, calling it a "separate subject to be taken up at a separate time."
Meanwhile, conference committee members declined to speculate on what negotiations might produce.
"We're going to try to get something that works," Missouri Republican Sen. Roy Blunt told VOA. "It's going to have to be done somewhere other than in public. I'm of the view that we should make it as all-encompassing as we can."
At the White House Tuesday, Sanders echoed Trump's threats to declare a national emergency and order wall construction if Congress fails to provide funding.
"If they don't come back with a deal, it means Democrats get virtually nothing," the press secretary said. "That will make the president — force him — to take executive action that does not give Democrats the things that they want."
Such talk is counterproductive, according to Democrats.
"When the president injects maximalist partisan demands into the process, negotiations tend to fall apart," Schumer said. "The president should allow the conference committee to proceed with good-faith negotiations. I genuinely hope it will produce something that is good for the country and acceptable to both sides."
The Congressional Budget Office estimated the five-week partial shutdown caused a $3 billion loss to the U.S. economy. The funding lapse caused federal services to be curtailed or paused and created a financial hardship for 800,000 federal workers who were either furloughed or worked without pay.