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Trump's demand for wall remains major sticking point for Hill negotiators

House and Senate negotiators over the last few days have moved closer to ironing out their differences on measures in the spending legislation that are not tied to border security and barriers sought by Trump, the sources said. They expect the focus of the talks to shift toward Trump's wall demands and border security after the President's Tuesday State of the Union speech and once the lawmakers are briefed by experts on the situation at the border later this week.
Trump ignites new immigration furor ahead of State of the Union
But time is running short given that lawmakers want to reach a deal by week's end in order to give time for the House and Senate to jump through its procedural hoops and pass legislation before another punishing shutdown that would affect one-quarter of the federal government.
When asked by CNN if a shut down is off the table, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said "We don't know quite yet how this is going to end. But I'm hopeful and optimistic."
Sen. Richard Shelby, an Alabama Republican who's the chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, suggested talks took a step backward at the end of last week when House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat, declared at a news conference, "There's not going to be any wall money in the legislation."
"If she says there's not going to be any, I don't know where the negotiations go," Shelby said in response to her hard line.
His concerns are echoed by other Republicans close to the negotiations, who described Pelosi's acceptance last week of additional vehicle fencing along the border as something that's already allowed under current law and therefore not a concession from Democrats.
But Trump has also confused negotiators by not clarifying his demands -- and it's uncertain whether his State of the Union address will help or hurt Congress' ability to cut a deal in just days.
"Listen closely to the State of the Union," Trump said Friday when asked if he was ready to announce a national emergency to build a wall, should congressional talks not result in a deal he wants.
Meanwhile, McConnell said last week he hopes Trump doesn't go the emergency route.
The chances of Donald Trump declaring a national emergency at the border just went way up
Congressional Republicans privately worry that Democrats would force a vote to overturn that emergency declaration, something that would likely pass the Democratic-controlled House and may clear the GOP-led Senate if just a handful of Republicans join Democrats. The issue could divide Republicans and be an ugly battle even if opponents of the wall can't get enough votes to override a presidential veto.
Shelby told CNN Sunday he would invite Border Patrol officials to Capitol Hill this week to inform negotiators of their needs.
"It's a question: How do we get off the politics and to the substance? If we can do that, we will get the job done," Shelby told CNN's Jake Tapper.
In addition, the four GOP House members who are on the conference committee were on the US-Mexico border Sunday and Monday "to see the situation at the border first-hand and hear directly from experts on the ground" as "they work to come up with a compromise to fund border security," according to a tweet from the House Appropriations Committee Republicans.
This story has been updated to include additional developments from Monday.

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