Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

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    Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

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Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05
Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

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Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
Booker slams DHS secretary's 'amnesia' on Trump's reported 'shithole' comment
One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
"I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
RELATED: DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

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    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

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Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
"How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
A 's-show': Relationships fray in immigration fight
Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
"He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

Fretting Democrats

McConnell: Lawmakers shouldn't push for DACA deal this week
The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
"I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
Will 2020 contenders put Democrats in a bind on DACA?
GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
"I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
"A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

2020 stirs the pot

Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
"We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

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How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

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    Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

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Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
    Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
    Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
    One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
    "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
    The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
    The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

      JUST WATCHED

      Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

    MUST WATCH

    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
    While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
    "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
    But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
    A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
    Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
    The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
    CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
    "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

    Fretting Democrats

    The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
    "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
    The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
    They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
    GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
    "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
    Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
    Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
    Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
    Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
    They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
    "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

    2020 stirs the pot

    Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
    Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
    Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
    "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

        JUST WATCHED

        Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

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      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05
      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

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      Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

      DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
      President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
      Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
      Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
      Booker slams DHS secretary's 'amnesia' on Trump's reported 'shithole' comment
      One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
      "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
      RELATED: DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
      The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
      The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
      Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
      Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

        JUST WATCHED

        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

      MUST WATCH

      Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
      While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
      "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
      But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
      A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
      A 's-show': Relationships fray in immigration fight
      Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
      The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
      CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
      "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

      Fretting Democrats

      McConnell: Lawmakers shouldn't push for DACA deal this week
      The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
      "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
      The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
      They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
      Will 2020 contenders put Democrats in a bind on DACA?
      GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
      "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
      Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
      Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
      Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
      Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
      They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
      "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

      2020 stirs the pot

      Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
      Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
      Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
      "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
      Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

      MUST WATCH

      How three elections are snarling the immigration fight - CNNPolitics

      How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

        JUST WATCHED

        Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

      MUST WATCH

      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

      Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

      President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
        Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
        Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
        One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
        "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
        The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
        The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

          JUST WATCHED

          Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

        MUST WATCH

        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
        While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
        "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
        But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
        A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
        Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
        The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
        CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
        "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

        Fretting Democrats

        The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
        "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
        The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
        They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
        GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
        "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
        Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
        Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
        Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
        Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
        They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
        "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

        2020 stirs the pot

        Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
        Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
        Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
        "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
          How three elections are snarling the immigration fight - CNNPolitics

          How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

            JUST WATCHED

            Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

          MUST WATCH

          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

          Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

          President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
            Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
            Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
            One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
            "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
            The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
            The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

              JUST WATCHED

              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

            MUST WATCH

            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
            While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
            "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
            But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
            A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
            Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
            The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
            CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
            "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

            Fretting Democrats

            The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
            "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
            The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
            They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
            GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
            "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
            Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
            Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
            Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
            Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
            They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
            "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

            2020 stirs the pot

            Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
            Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
            Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
            "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
              Breaking News

              How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                JUST WATCHED

                Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

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              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

              Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

              President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                  JUST WATCHED

                  Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                MUST WATCH

                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                Fretting Democrats

                The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                2020 stirs the pot

                Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                    JUST WATCHED

                    Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                  MUST WATCH

                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05
                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                  MUST WATCH

                  Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                  DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
                  President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                  Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                  Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                  Booker slams DHS secretary's 'amnesia' on Trump's reported 'shithole' comment
                  One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                  "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                  RELATED: DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
                  The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                  The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                  Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                  Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                    JUST WATCHED

                    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                  MUST WATCH

                  Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                  While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                  "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                  But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                  A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                  A 's-show': Relationships fray in immigration fight
                  Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                  The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                  CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                  "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                  Fretting Democrats

                  McConnell: Lawmakers shouldn't push for DACA deal this week
                  The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                  "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                  The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                  They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                  Will 2020 contenders put Democrats in a bind on DACA?
                  GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                  "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                  Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                  Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                  Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                  Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                  They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                  "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                  2020 stirs the pot

                  Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                  Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                  Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                  "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                  Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                  MUST WATCH

                  How three elections are snarling the immigration fight - CNNPolitics

                  How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                    JUST WATCHED

                    Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                  MUST WATCH

                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                  Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                  President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                    Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                    Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                    One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                    "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                    The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                    The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                      JUST WATCHED

                      Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                    MUST WATCH

                    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                    While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                    "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                    But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                    A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                    Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                    The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                    CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                    "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                    Fretting Democrats

                    The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                    "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                    The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                    They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                    GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                    "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                    Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                    Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                    Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                    Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                    They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                    "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                    2020 stirs the pot

                    Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                    Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                    Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                    "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                      How three elections are snarling the immigration fight - CNNPolitics

                      How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                        JUST WATCHED

                        Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                      MUST WATCH

                      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                      Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                      President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                        Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                        Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                        One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                        "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                        The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                        The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                          JUST WATCHED

                          Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                        MUST WATCH

                        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                        While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                        "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                        But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                        A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                        Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                        The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                        CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                        "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                        Fretting Democrats

                        The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                        "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                        The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                        They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                        GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                        "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                        Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                        Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                        Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                        Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                        They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                        "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                        2020 stirs the pot

                        Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                        Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                        Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                        "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                          MUST WATCH

                          Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                          MUST WATCH

                          Breaking News

                          How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                            JUST WATCHED

                            Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                          MUST WATCH

                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                          Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                          President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                            Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                            Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                            One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                            "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                            The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                            The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                              JUST WATCHED

                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                            MUST WATCH

                            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                            While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                            "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                            But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                            A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                            Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                            The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                            CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                            "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                            Fretting Democrats

                            The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                            "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                            The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                            They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                            GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                            "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                            Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                            Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                            Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                            Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                            They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                            "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                            2020 stirs the pot

                            Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                            Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                            Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                            "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                JUST WATCHED

                                Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                              MUST WATCH

                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05
                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                              MUST WATCH

                              Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                              DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
                              President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                              Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                              Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                              Booker slams DHS secretary's 'amnesia' on Trump's reported 'shithole' comment
                              One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                              "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                              RELATED: DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
                              The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                              The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                JUST WATCHED

                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                              MUST WATCH

                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                              While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                              "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                              But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                              A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                              A 's-show': Relationships fray in immigration fight
                              Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                              The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                              CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                              "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                              Fretting Democrats

                              McConnell: Lawmakers shouldn't push for DACA deal this week
                              The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                              "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                              The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                              They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                              Will 2020 contenders put Democrats in a bind on DACA?
                              GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                              "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                              Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                              Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                              Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                              Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                              They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                              "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                              2020 stirs the pot

                              Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                              Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                              Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                              "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                              MUST WATCH

                              Breaking News

                              How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                JUST WATCHED

                                Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                              MUST WATCH

                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                              Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                              President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                  JUST WATCHED

                                  Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                MUST WATCH

                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                Fretting Democrats

                                The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                2020 stirs the pot

                                Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                    JUST WATCHED

                                    Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                  MUST WATCH

                                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05
                                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                  MUST WATCH

                                  Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                  DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
                                  President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                  Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                  Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                  Booker slams DHS secretary's 'amnesia' on Trump's reported 'shithole' comment
                                  One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                  "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                  RELATED: DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
                                  The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                  The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                  Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                  Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                    JUST WATCHED

                                    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                  MUST WATCH

                                  Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                  While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                  "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                  But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                  A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                  A 's-show': Relationships fray in immigration fight
                                  Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                  The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                  CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                  "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                  Fretting Democrats

                                  McConnell: Lawmakers shouldn't push for DACA deal this week
                                  The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                  "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                  The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                  They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                  Will 2020 contenders put Democrats in a bind on DACA?
                                  GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                  "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                  Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                  Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                  Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                  Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                  They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                  "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                  2020 stirs the pot

                                  Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                  Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                  Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                  "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                  Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                  MUST WATCH

                                  How three elections are snarling the immigration fight - CNNPolitics

                                  How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                    JUST WATCHED

                                    Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                  MUST WATCH

                                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                                  Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                  President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                    Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                    Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                    One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                    "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                    The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                    The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                      JUST WATCHED

                                      Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                    MUST WATCH

                                    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                    While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                    "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                    But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                    A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                    Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                    The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                    CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                    "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                    Fretting Democrats

                                    The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                    "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                    The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                    They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                    GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                    "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                    Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                    Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                    Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                    Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                    They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                    "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                    2020 stirs the pot

                                    Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                    Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                    Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                    "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                      How three elections are snarling the immigration fight - CNNPolitics

                                      How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                                      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                        JUST WATCHED

                                        Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                      MUST WATCH

                                      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                                      Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                      President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                        Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                        Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                        One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                        "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                        The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                        The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                          JUST WATCHED

                                          Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                        MUST WATCH

                                        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                        While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                        "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                        But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                        A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                        Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                        The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                        CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                        "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                        Fretting Democrats

                                        The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                        "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                        The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                        They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                        GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                        "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                        Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                        Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                        Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                        Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                        They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                        "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                        2020 stirs the pot

                                        Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                        Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                        Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                        "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                          Breaking News

                                          How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                            JUST WATCHED

                                            Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                          MUST WATCH

                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                                          Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                          President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                            Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                            Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                            One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                            "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                            The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                            The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                              JUST WATCHED

                                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                            MUST WATCH

                                            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                            While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                            "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                            But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                            A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                            Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                            The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                            CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                            "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                            Fretting Democrats

                                            The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                            "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                            The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                            They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                            GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                            "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                            Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                            Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                            Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                            Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                            They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                            "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                            2020 stirs the pot

                                            Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                            Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                            Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                            "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                JUST WATCHED

                                                Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                              MUST WATCH

                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05
                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                              MUST WATCH

                                              Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                              DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
                                              President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                              Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                              Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                              Booker slams DHS secretary's 'amnesia' on Trump's reported 'shithole' comment
                                              One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                              "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                              RELATED: DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
                                              The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                              The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                JUST WATCHED

                                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                              MUST WATCH

                                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                              While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                              "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                              But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                              A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                              A 's-show': Relationships fray in immigration fight
                                              Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                              The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                              CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                              "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                              Fretting Democrats

                                              McConnell: Lawmakers shouldn't push for DACA deal this week
                                              The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                              "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                              The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                              They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                              Will 2020 contenders put Democrats in a bind on DACA?
                                              GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                              "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                              Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                              Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                              Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                              Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                              They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                              "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                              2020 stirs the pot

                                              Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                              Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                              Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                              "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                              MUST WATCH

                                              How three elections are snarling the immigration fight - CNNPolitics

                                              How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                JUST WATCHED

                                                Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                              MUST WATCH

                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                                              Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                              President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                                Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                                Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                                One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                                "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                                The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                                The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

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                                                  Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

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                                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                                While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                                "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                                But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                                A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                                Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                                The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                                CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                                "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                                Fretting Democrats

                                                The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                                "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                                The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                                They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                                GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                                "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                                Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                                Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                                Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                                Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                                They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                                "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                                2020 stirs the pot

                                                Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                                Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                                Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                                "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                                  How three elections are snarling the immigration fight - CNNPolitics

                                                  How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                                                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                    JUST WATCHED

                                                    Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

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                                                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                                                  Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                                  President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                                    Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                                    Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                                    One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                                    "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                                    The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                                    The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                                    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                                    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                      JUST WATCHED

                                                      Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

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                                                    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                                    While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                                    "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                                    But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                                    A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                                    Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                                    The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                                    CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                                    "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                                    Fretting Democrats

                                                    The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                                    "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                                    The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                                    They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                                    GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                                    "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                                    Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                                    Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                                    Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                                    Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                                    They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                                    "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                                    2020 stirs the pot

                                                    Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                                    Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                                    Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                                    "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                                      Breaking News

                                                      How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                                                      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                                      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                        JUST WATCHED

                                                        Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

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                                                      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                                                      Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                                      President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                                        Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                                        Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                                        One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                                        "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                                        The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                                        The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                                        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                                        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                          JUST WATCHED

                                                          Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                        MUST WATCH

                                                        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                                        While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                                        "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                                        But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                                        A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                                        Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                                        The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                                        CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                                        "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                                        Fretting Democrats

                                                        The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                                        "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                                        The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                                        They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                                        GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                                        "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                                        Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                                        Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                                        Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                                        Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                                        They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                                        "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                                        2020 stirs the pot

                                                        Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                                        Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                                        Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                                        "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                            JUST WATCHED

                                                            Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                          MUST WATCH

                                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05
                                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                          MUST WATCH

                                                          Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                                          DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
                                                          President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                                          Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                                          Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                                          Booker slams DHS secretary's 'amnesia' on Trump's reported 'shithole' comment
                                                          One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                                          "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                                          RELATED: DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
                                                          The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                                          The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                                          Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                                          Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                            JUST WATCHED

                                                            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                          MUST WATCH

                                                          Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                                          While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                                          "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                                          But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                                          A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                                          A 's-show': Relationships fray in immigration fight
                                                          Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                                          The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                                          CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                                          "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                                          Fretting Democrats

                                                          McConnell: Lawmakers shouldn't push for DACA deal this week
                                                          The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                                          "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                                          The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                                          They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                                          Will 2020 contenders put Democrats in a bind on DACA?
                                                          GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                                          "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                                          Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                                          Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                                          Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                                          Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                                          They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                                          "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                                          2020 stirs the pot

                                                          Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                                          Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                                          Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                                          "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                                          Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                          MUST WATCH

                                                          Breaking News

                                                          How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                            JUST WATCHED

                                                            Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                          MUST WATCH

                                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                                                          Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                                          President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                                            Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                                            Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                                            One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                                            "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                                            The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                                            The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                                            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                                            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                              JUST WATCHED

                                                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                            MUST WATCH

                                                            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                                            While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                                            "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                                            But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                                            A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                                            Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                                            The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                                            CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                                            "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                                            Fretting Democrats

                                                            The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                                            "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                                            The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                                            They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                                            GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                                            "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                                            Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                                            Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                                            Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                                            Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                                            They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                                            "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                                            2020 stirs the pot

                                                            Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                                            Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                                            Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                                            "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                                JUST WATCHED

                                                                Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                              MUST WATCH

                                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05
                                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                              MUST WATCH

                                                              Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                                              DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
                                                              President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                                              Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                                              Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                                              Booker slams DHS secretary's 'amnesia' on Trump's reported 'shithole' comment
                                                              One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                                              "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                                              RELATED: DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
                                                              The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                                              The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                                JUST WATCHED

                                                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                              MUST WATCH

                                                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                                              While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                                              "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                                              But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                                              A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                                              A 's-show': Relationships fray in immigration fight
                                                              Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                                              The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                                              CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                                              "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                                              Fretting Democrats

                                                              McConnell: Lawmakers shouldn't push for DACA deal this week
                                                              The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                                              "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                                              The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                                              They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                                              Will 2020 contenders put Democrats in a bind on DACA?
                                                              GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                                              "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                                              Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                                              Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                                              Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                                              Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                                              They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                                              "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                                              2020 stirs the pot

                                                              Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                                              Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                                              Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                                              "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                              MUST WATCH

                                                              How three elections are snarling the immigration fight - CNNPolitics

                                                              How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                                JUST WATCHED

                                                                Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                              MUST WATCH

                                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                                                              Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                                              President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                                                Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                                                Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                                                One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                                                "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                                                The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                                                The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                                  JUST WATCHED

                                                                  Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                                MUST WATCH

                                                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                                                While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                                                "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                                                But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                                                A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                                                Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                                                The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                                                CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                                                "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                                                Fretting Democrats

                                                                The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                                                "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                                                The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                                                They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                                                GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                                                "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                                                Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                                                Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                                                Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                                                Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                                                They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                                                "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                                                2020 stirs the pot

                                                                Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                                                Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                                                Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                                                "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                                                  How three elections are snarling the immigration fight - CNNPolitics

                                                                  How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                                                                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                                                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                                    JUST WATCHED

                                                                    Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                                  MUST WATCH

                                                                  Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                                                                  Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                                                  President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                                                    Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                                                    Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                                                    One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                                                    "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                                                    The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                                                    The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                                                    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                                                    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                                      JUST WATCHED

                                                                      Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                                    MUST WATCH

                                                                    Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                                                    While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                                                    "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                                                    But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                                                    A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                                                    Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                                                    The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                                                    CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                                                    "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                                                    Fretting Democrats

                                                                    The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                                                    "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                                                    The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                                                    They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                                                    GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                                                    "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                                                    Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                                                    Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                                                    Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                                                    Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                                                    They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                                                    "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                                                    2020 stirs the pot

                                                                    Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                                                    Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                                                    Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                                                    "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                                                      Breaking News

                                                                      How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                                                                      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                                                      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                                        JUST WATCHED

                                                                        Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                                      MUST WATCH

                                                                      Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                                                                      Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                                                      President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                                                        Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                                                        Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                                                        One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                                                        "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                                                        The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                                                        The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                                                        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                                                        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                                          JUST WATCHED

                                                                          Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                                        MUST WATCH

                                                                        Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                                                        While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                                                        "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                                                        But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                                                        A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                                                        Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                                                        The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                                                        CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                                                        "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                                                        Fretting Democrats

                                                                        The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                                                        "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                                                        The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                                                        They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                                                        GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                                                        "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                                                        Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                                                        Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                                                        Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                                                        Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                                                        They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                                                        "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                                                        2020 stirs the pot

                                                                        Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                                                        Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                                                        Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                                                        "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                                            JUST WATCHED

                                                                            Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                                          MUST WATCH

                                                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05
                                                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                                          MUST WATCH

                                                                          Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                                                          DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
                                                                          President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                                                          Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                                                          Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                                                          Booker slams DHS secretary's 'amnesia' on Trump's reported 'shithole' comment
                                                                          One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                                                          "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                                                          RELATED: DACA talks back to starting line after Trump meeting
                                                                          The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                                                          The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                                                          Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                                                          Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                                            JUST WATCHED

                                                                            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                                          MUST WATCH

                                                                          Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                                                          While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                                                          "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                                                          But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                                                          A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                                                          A 's-show': Relationships fray in immigration fight
                                                                          Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                                                          The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                                                          CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                                                          "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                                                          Fretting Democrats

                                                                          McConnell: Lawmakers shouldn't push for DACA deal this week
                                                                          The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                                                          "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                                                          The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                                                          They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                                                          Will 2020 contenders put Democrats in a bind on DACA?
                                                                          GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                                                          "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                                                          Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                                                          Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                                                          Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                                                          Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                                                          They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                                                          "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                                                          2020 stirs the pot

                                                                          Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                                                          Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                                                          Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                                                          "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                                                          Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                                          MUST WATCH

                                                                          How three elections are snarling the immigration fight - CNNPolitics

                                                                          How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                                                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                                            JUST WATCHED

                                                                            Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                                          MUST WATCH

                                                                          Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                                                                          Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                                                          President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                                                            Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                                                            Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                                                            One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                                                            "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                                                            The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                                                            The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                                                            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                                                            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                                              JUST WATCHED

                                                                              Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                                            MUST WATCH

                                                                            Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                                                            While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                                                            "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                                                            But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                                                            A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                                                            Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                                                            The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                                                            CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                                                            "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                                                            Fretting Democrats

                                                                            The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                                                            "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                                                            The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                                                            They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                                                            GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                                                            "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                                                            Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                                                            Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                                                            Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                                                            Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                                                            They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                                                            "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                                                            2020 stirs the pot

                                                                            Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                                                            Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                                                            Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                                                            "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."
                                                                              How three elections are snarling the immigration fight - CNNPolitics

                                                                              How three elections are snarling the immigration fight

                                                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison
                                                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                                                JUST WATCHED

                                                                                Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison

                                                                              MUST WATCH

                                                                              Booker: Trump's words fester, they poison 02:05

                                                                              Washington (CNN)The immigration and government shutdown cliffhanger gripping Washington is a symptom of a broader reality: American politics is being held hostage to three nation-changing elections -- one past and two that are yet to come.

                                                                              President Donald Trump, on a perpetual victory lap over his dramatic 2016 triumph, is locked into the hard-line positions on immigration on which he built the foundations of his historic campaign.
                                                                                Congressional Democrats, hoping for a vote tsunami in midterm elections this fall, are being driven on by a raging anti-Trump grassroots voting base as they seek to shield nearly 800,000 undocumented immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children. But as they consider withholding support for government funding to leverage an immigration deal, Democratic leaders must balance pressure from progressives with the needs of vulnerable red state Democrats vital to their hopes of recapturing the Senate and who risk being branded by GOP foes as friends of "amnesty."
                                                                                Then there are Democrats who scent a chance to stand firm on immigration to woo 2020 primary voters, who will pick who will duel an apparently weakened President for the White House.
                                                                                One potential candidate, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, put on an impassioned show in the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday, skewering Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for saying she did not recall Trump using the word "shithole."
                                                                                "I've got a President of the United States whose office I respect, who talks about the countries' origins and my fellow citizens in the most despicable of manner. You don't remember. You can't remember the words of your commander in chief. I find that unacceptable," Booker said.
                                                                                The multiple, complicated, electoral scenarios shaping the behavior of top players in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program debate are making compromise on an issue that is central to the DNA of both parties and repeatedly defies congressional action even more difficult.
                                                                                The standoff reveals again the polarization of two parties tracking ever further from the political center. And the excruciating process of dealing with the DACA recipients is an early sign of how the looming midterm elections, and even the 2020 race, are narrowing the political running room for big lifts on any contentious issue, whether it is the reform of infrastructure or entitlements.
                                                                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit
                                                                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                                                  JUST WATCHED

                                                                                  Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit

                                                                                MUST WATCH

                                                                                Booker to DHS chief: Your amnesia is complicit 01:58
                                                                                While he is clearly exercised with the immigration debate, and the potential prospect of a government shutdown, the President took time out on Tuesday to savor his achievement in 2016 -- a topic of which he never tires.
                                                                                "How did I win Arkansas by so much when she came from Arkansas?" Trump marveled during a White House event on women, referring to his vanquished rival Hillary Clinton, before crowing about Michigan, which had been expected to go blue.
                                                                                But more importantly, Trump is having a tough time watering down the purity of the positions on immigration that were instrumental in his political rise.
                                                                                A week ago Tuesday, Trump told lawmakers that he would sign any bill they sent him. Then, two days later, he sunk a bipartisan deal to offer spending on his border wall in return for a reprieve for DACA recipients, apparently partly due to the prodding of his political adviser Stephen Miller, the ideological architect of the campaign's immigration stance.
                                                                                Immigration tensions have also been immeasurably increased by Trump's reported blast at "shithole" African nations last week.
                                                                                The episode is a flashback to 2016, when Trump's rhetoric won him a reputation among anti-Washington voters as a scourge of political correctness and a candidate who was quite happy to tear at racial and cultural divides for political gain. But it was also a flash forward to his 2020 re-election campaign. Since Trump made little attempt to broaden his appeal after the inauguration, he knows his best hope of winning a second term is keeping his base engaged.
                                                                                CNN's Gloria Borger and Jim Acosta reported this week that Trump is convinced that despite the furor over his attack on African nations, his language will play well with his most loyal supporters.
                                                                                "He didn't seem bothered by it at all. And he thinks it's going to help him politically, or might," one GOP source told Acosta.

                                                                                Fretting Democrats

                                                                                The Democratic grassroots is demanding principled, dramatic action by party lawmakers to save the Dreamers, especially after the congressional party declined to shut down the government in December over the issue.
                                                                                "I think there is deep apprehension right now among the progressive base," said Murshed Zaheed, political director of CREDO, a progressive social change network. "Democrats have an open net, they can't chip wide right or wide left at this point. There is no room for error."
                                                                                The DACA issue is trapping the Democratic leadership between pent-up frustration in the grassroots and a Senate electoral map that is weighted towards Republicans.
                                                                                They must defend 10 Senate seats in states won by Trump two years ago, in many cases by wide margins over Clinton. That means incumbent Democrats in need independent and moderate Republican voters wary of the party line on DACA.
                                                                                GOP consultants are salivating over the possibility of mobilizing conservatives by accusing red-state Democrats of voting to shut down the government to grant "amnesty" to undocumented migrants.
                                                                                "I can't imagine (that) 2018 Democrats would want to shut down the government over that, especially when we are negotiating in good faith," said Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn.
                                                                                Democrats in this position include Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Claire McCaskill in Missouri and Jon Tester in Montana.
                                                                                Manchin said on Tuesday he would back a "clean" continuing resolution to keep government open this week -- even if it is not twinned with a reprieve for DACA recipients.
                                                                                Ten is also the number of Democratic votes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may need to peel away to fund the government before a Friday midnight shutdown deadline, so red-state Democrats will come under intense pressure.
                                                                                Still, progressives say the risk to Democrats in conservative states is overblown, pointing out that polls show an overwhelming majority of Americans back a right to residency for undocumented migrants brought to the US as children.
                                                                                They also cite polls showing a potential blue wave in November, and argue that the victory of Doug Jones in the special election in deep-red Alabama last year shows the party can play all over the map this cycle.
                                                                                "A confident opposition party fights for the heart and soul of their base," said Zaheed.

                                                                                2020 stirs the pot

                                                                                Party tensions are being exacerbated by the ambitions of Democrats positioning for the primary race that will explode after November.
                                                                                Booker's theatrics gelled with his passionate approach to politics and were no doubt sincere. But it was impossible not to view them in the context of a potential presidential race since if he does run, they will quickly become part of his campaign lore. Booker has already signaled that he will not vote for a deal to fund that government that does not include a DACA fix, making it all but certain that other progressive senators that could run for President in 2020, including California's Kamala Harris, New York's Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts will follow suit, as they did the last time a stopgap funding bill passed in December.
                                                                                Speaking before Booker's performance, McCaskill bemoaned how the 2020 race was already complicating her life.
                                                                                "We've got people running for president all trying to find their base, and then you've got people from Trump states that are trying to continue to legislate the way we always have -- by negotiation," she told The New York Times. "And never the twain shall meet."