Washington faces a partial government shutdown in eight days and lawmakers don't appear any closer to resolving the spending fight over how much money to give President Trump for a border wall. The pressure is very much on Republican leaders to solve this puzzle, after Trump declared in an Oval Office meeting with top Democrats that he'd be happy to take credit for a government shutdown unless Congress allocates $5 billion for a border wall. Democrats are capping their offer at $1.6 billion. With the Dec. 21 deadline looming, lawmakers are increasingly pessimistic that a deal can be reached. "I think we're going to have a shutdown for two reasons. No. 1, President Trump does not look to me like he was bluffing or is bluffing, and No. 2, I don't think [Rep. Nancy] Pelosi is going to agree to anything because she's worried about her Speakership." – Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.). "I don't think it's inevitable. It's probably more than possible right now. It'll shut down unless we resolve some things." – Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee. The Memo: Allies worry as Trump's woes mount. Here's where things stand… The House Trump has left Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) with a tight knot to untie before he leaves office at the end of the month. The president boasted that House Republicans could easily pass a bill allocating $5 billion to the wall. GOP leaders are unsure and haven't settled on a vehicle for it yet. Democrats would be happy to pass a stopgap measure that prolongs the fight into the new year, when they'll be in the majority. One major GOP hurdle for the wall? Republicans were conducting "bed checks" on Wednesday to figure out how many of them were in Washington. The House is only scheduled to work four days between now and Dec. 21, and 17 Republicans missed Wednesday's farm bill vote. Many of them are not returning to the House next year and remember that Trump mocked a handful of House Republicans who lost their races. Don't count on their votes. The Hill: GOP struggles to win votes for Trump's $5 billion wall demand. The Senate Trump shocked Senate Republicans when he said he'd take responsibility for any shutdown over the holidays. The Hill's Alexander Bolton has this crushing anecdote: Senate Republicans were putting the final touches on talking points blaming the shutdown on Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), as any bill that gets out of the Senate will need Democratic support to reach 60 votes. That's out the window now. It's a "Trump shutdown" if it happens. One possibility? The House passes a stopgap measure known as a continuing resolution with $5 billion for the wall. If Republicans can get that through the House, it would likely come back from the Senate with the $5 billion whittled to $1.6 billion. Would Trump accept that? Or will he follow through on his shutdown threat? © Getty Images
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