The Government Shutdown Is Like a Hostage Situation 
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2019/01/trump-republicans-shutdown-hostages.html
 Trump and his fellow Republicans are using the same tactics as criminal 
captors demanding ransom. By WILLIAM SALETAN 
https://slate.com/author/william-saletan
JAN 09, 20199:22 PM
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 President Donald Trump speaks to the nation from the Oval Office on Tuesday in 
Washington.
 Carlos Barria/Pool/Getty Images

 

 In February 1974, the Symbionese Liberation Army, a left-wing radical group, 
kidnapped the 19-year-old daughter 
https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/big/0204.html#article
 of media mogul William Randolph Hearst. The SLA claimed to represent “all 
oppressed people,” “self-determination,” and “human and constitutional rights 
https://www.nytimes.com/1974/02/23/archives/symbionese-liberation-army-terrorism-from-left.html.”
 It “requested” that Hearst show “good faith 
https://www.nytimes.com/1974/02/13/archives/transcript-of-tape-recording-of-patricia-hearsts-voice-broadcast-by.html”
 by providing hundreds of millions of dollars in food aid 
https://www.nytimes.com/1974/02/16/archives/hearst-kidnapping-linked-totwo-escaped-convicts-hearst-kidnapping.html
 to the poor. “The people are awaiting your gesture 
https://www.nytimes.com/1974/02/17/archives/demands-modified-by-hearst-abductors-excerpts-from-text.html,”
 an SLA leader told Hearst. “We will accept a sincere effort on your part.”
 The Hearst case, like other abductions, was violent and far removed from the 
genteel halls of Congress. But if you want to understand the behavior of 
Republicans in the current government shutdown, you have to understand 
kidnapping. The tactics of President Donald Trump and his congressional 
allies—taking hostages, using them as messengers, and blaming their suffering 
on the people who could ransom them—echo the tactics of criminal captors like 
the SLA.
 
 In the shutdown, the hostages are public employees, veterans, and everyone 
else who depends on federal payments. The ransom is $5 billion. Like other 
ideologues, the Republicans claim to have a good cause: a wall on the Mexican 
border. But morally, the bottom line is the same: You can’t hold people 
hostage, even if you think your cause is worthy. The question at stake isn’t 
border security. It’s whether the government will shut down and stay closed 
every time extremists demand money for a pet cause.
 

 Trump forced this debacle. On Dec. 11, he said, “If we don’t get what we want 
… I will shut down the government 
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/remarks-president-trump-meeting-senate-minority-leader-chuck-schumer-house-speaker-designate-nancy-pelosi/.”
 On Jan. 2, two weeks into the shutdown, he thanked Vice President Mike Pence 
for congratulating him on taking “a strong stand to shut down the government 
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/remarks-president-trump-cabinet-meeting-12/
 until we secure the funding to build a wall.” But now Trump is trying to hold 
congressional Democrats, from whom he has demanded ransom, responsible for 
dragging their feet. “Look, this shutdown could end tomorrow, [or] it could 
also go on for a long time,” Trump told reporters on Saturday. “It’s really 
dependent on the Democrats 
https://www.c-span.org/video/?456721-2/president-trump-speaks-economy-government-shutdown-border-wall.”
 On Sunday, Trump’s acting chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney, disputed suggestions 
that the president was responsible. On the contrary, Mulvaney proposed, “It’s 
the Democrats’ refusal to give the necessary money 
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/1901/06/sotu.01.html for border security 
that is the cause of the shutdown.”

 The question at stake isn’t border security. It’s whether the government will 
shut down every time extremists demand money for a pet cause.
 Republicans are trying to recast their extortion as ordinary negotiation. 
“We’re asking for $5.6 billion. They’re offering us zero,” Mulvaney told CNN. 
He complained that in a meeting with Trump on Friday, Democrats “said they were 
not interested in having any further discussions until … the government was 
open.” Trump and Mulvaney dismiss that position as absurd. The least Democrats 
can do, according to the White House, is “come to the middle 
https://www.c-span.org/video/?456741-1/mercedes-schlapp-democrats-come-middle-end-government-shutdown.”
 

 Some abductors try to use their hostages as messengers. That’s what the White 
House is doing to federal employees caught in the shutdown. On Monday, a 
reporter asked Mercedes Schlapp, the White House director of strategic 
communications, “What’s the White House message to the federal workers who are 
on track to miss their first paycheck?” Schlapp urged these furloughed workers 
to “call the Democrats 
https://www.c-span.org/video/?456741-1/mercedes-schlapp-democrats-come-middle-end-government-shutdown
 and basically tell the Democrats, ‘Stop the delay tactics, let’s negotiate.’”
 When ransom isn’t paid, kidnappers escalate their threats, making it look as 
though the people withholding the money are at fault. The fate of the hostage, 
they insinuate, is up to her family 
https://www.nytimes.com/1974/02/13/archives/transcript-of-tape-recording-of-patricia-hearsts-voice-broadcast-by.html.
 That’s how Kevin McCarthy, the House Republican leader, talks about Trump’s 
hostages. Democrats should cut a deal with the president “before we get to the 
point where federal employees do not get paid 
https://www.c-span.org/video/?456782-1/house-republican-leaders-speak-reporters-closed-door-meeting-border-security,”
 McCarthy warned his colleagues on Tuesday.
 
 On Tuesday night, Trump read a prepared statement on prime-time TV. 
Officially, it was a presidential address. In reality, it was a message from 
the kidnappers. “The federal government remains shut down for one reason and 
one reason only: because Democrats will not fund border security 
https://www.c-span.org/video/?456761-1/president-trump-calls-border-growing-humanitarian-security-crisis,”
 said Trump. “The only solution is for Democrats to pass a spending bill that 
defends our borders and reopens the government.” Senate Majority Leader Mitch 
McConnell repeated Trump’s demand on Wednesday morning. By refusing to pay for 
the wall, said McConnell, Democrats were “prolonging 
https://www.c-span.org/video/?456789-4/senator-mcconnell-government-shutdown” 
the shutdown. He urged them to “negotiate a fair solution with the president to 
secure our nation and reopen all of the federal government.”
 

 This is a charade. Democrats have already passed bills to reopen the 
government. The reason those bills haven’t become law is that McConnell refuses 
to let the Senate vote on them 
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2019/01/government-shutdown-border-wall-republicans-congress-trump.html,
 and Trump refuses to sign them. When Republicans are asked why they’re sitting 
on these bills, they say it’s impossible to reopen the government before 
resolving the wall debate. On Tuesday, White House counselor Kellyanne Conway 
said opening the government first wasn’t “practical 
https://www.c-span.org/video/?456798-1/kellyanne-conway-speaks-reporters-ahead-presidents-address.”
 Steve Scalise, the House Republican whip, said of the reopening and the wall, 
“You can’t have one without the other 
https://www.c-span.org/video/?456782-1/house-republican-leaders-speak-reporters-closed-door-meeting-border-security.”
 Neither Conway nor Scalise could explain the connection, because there isn’t 
one. The Republicans just don’t want to give up their hostages.
 On Wednesday afternoon, Democrats went to the White House to discuss reopening 
the government. Trump walked out of the meeting. Pence, McCarthy, and Scalise 
blamed the meltdown on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. “The president called the 
question in the meeting,” Pence told reporters 
https://www.c-span.org/video/?456854-101/vice-president-gop-leaders-speak-shutdown-talks-falter
 afterward. “He asked Speaker Pelosi … if he reopened the government quickly, 
would she agree to agree to funding for a wall or a barrier on the southern 
border? And when she said no, the president said, ‘Goodbye.’ ”
 
 There’s a case to be made for a border wall, just as there’s a case to be made 
for feeding the poor. Congress is free to debate these issues anytime. But 
that’s not the question before us. The question before us is whether it’s 
acceptable—and whether it will become normal—to shut down the government as a 
bargaining tactic. If you pay ransom for hostages, you’ll get more 
hostage-takers. That’s true of kidnappings. It’s true of shutdowns, too. 

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