Trump asks 'how much more American blood must we shed' by immigrant killers before Democrats agree to build wall - as he paints a terrifying picture of drugs and violence spilling across the border in defiant Oval Office address
- Trump and the White House had hinted the president may declare a national emergency in order to build his border wall
- But instead he stayed the course, pressing Democrats to relent in a battle of wills over $5.7 billion in funding for the project
- Prime-time Oval Office address played the shame card, blaming Democrats for bloodshed caused by illegal immigrants
- Chuck Schumer and nancy Pelosi delivered the Democrats' response
- 'Much of what we have heard from President Trump throughout this senseless shutdown has been full of misinformation and even malice,' they said
- Democratic Party chairman slammed Trump for 'using the Oval Office to deceive the American people and spout offensive, anti-immigrant rhetoric'
- Trump told news executives and anchors at lunch that he was inclined to cancel the speech and a Thursday trip to the border, fearing it would make no difference
- But communications aides Bill Shine, Sarah Sanders and Kellyanne Conway talked him into it, he said
President Donald Trump stopped short on Tuesday of declaring a that a national emergency exists on America's southern border, but reiterated his demand that congressional Democrats fund a border wall that he has promised for nearly four years.
But he played the shame card with a vengeance, blaming them for playing politics with innocent American lives and allowing 'a crisis of the heart and a crisis of the soul' to fester.
'How much more American blood must we shed before Congress does its job?' Trump asked in a 9-minute speech from the Oval Office.
Citing a string of murders committed by illegal immigrants who have been previously deported form the United States, he demanded of lawmakers: 'For those who refuse to compromise in the name of border security, I would ask: Imagine if it was your child, your husband or your wife whose life was so cruelly shattered and totally broken.'
'To every member of Congress: Pass a bill that ends this crisis.'

President Donald Trump spoke for nine minnutes from the Oval Office of the White House on Tuesday, shaming congressional Democrats as he blamed them for bloodshed caused by illegal immigrants

Trump is demanding $5.7 billion in new congressional spending for his long-promised border wall

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (right) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer delivered the Democrats' response after Trump spoke, framing the conflict as Trump's personal, uninformed crusade as they insisted they won't bend and agree to his terms
Trump said Tuesday that child trafficking and sexual violence against women who try to migrate into the U.S. illegally is a 'cycle of human suffering' that he's determined to end.
He implored Americans to call their members of Congress 'and tell them to finally, after all of these decades, secure our border. This is a choice between right and wrong, justice and injustice.'
The White House has requested $5.7 billion in new funding to continue the wall's construction. The president passed up the option to declare an emergency on Tuesday and spend existing Defense Department dollars to build it without Congress.

An art exhibit occupies part of the U.S.-Mexico border fence on the Tijuana, Mexico side; Trump wants to erect more sections like it in hundreds of miles of border territory where no barriers exist

A U.S. Marine stood outside the doors to the West Wing of the White House on Tuesday night ahead of Trump's address, signifying that the president was working and not in the presidential residence quarters
Instead he returned to his previous lines of argument, claiming a border security crisis has resulted in a flood of narcotics and human trafficking, and endangering Americans' lives.
Trump plans to host congressional leaders from both parties at the White House for negotiations on Wednesday, followed by a Capitol Hill visit to brief Republicans
He will visit the southern border on Thursday to highlight his demand for a wall.
The New York Times reported that Trump told a lunchtime meeting of news executives and anchors on Tuesday that he was inclined to skip the border trip – and the Tuesday night speech – but his advisers persuaded him to follow through.
'It’s not going to change a damn thing, but I’m still doing it,' Trump told them, pointing to senior communications aides Bill Shine, Sarah Huckabee Sanders and Kellyanne Conway and observing that 'these people behind you say it’s worth it.'
The conflict between Trump and congressional Democrats led to a partial shutdown of the federal government a few days before Christmas. Without an agreement on how to fund about one-quarter of the government, the affected agencies can't reopen.
About 780,000 federal workers are either on unpaid furlough or being forced to work without pay. All will receive back pay when the shutdown ends, but they are likely to miss regularly scheduled paychecks on Friday.
Responding on Capitol Hill, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer framed the conflict as Trump's personal, uninformed crusade as they insisted they won't bend and agree to his terms.
'Sadly, much of what we have heard from President Trump throughout this senseless shutdown has been full of misinformation and even malice,' they said.
'The president has chosen fear.'

Trump passed on the chance to declare a national emergency on the southern border, a move that would have empowered him to freely spend the Pentagon's existing budget to build his wall without getting new funding from Congress
Their rebuttal criticized Trump for saying a flood of migrants at the border represents 'a security threat,' instead calling it 'a humanitarian challenge.'
Trump noted Schumer's past approval of a wall on America's southern border. The White House has promoted the historical fact of Schumer and former senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama all voting for it during the George W. Bush presidency.
Schumer 'has repeatedly supported a physical barrier in the past, along with many other Democrats,' he said. 'They changed their mind only after I was elected president. Democrats in Congress have refused to recognize the crisis.'
Trump cited statistics in his brief presentation, saying that in the past two years immigration officers 'made 266,000 arrests of aliens with criminal records,' including '100,000 assaults, 30,000 sex crimes and 4,000 violent killings.'
'Thousands more lives will be lost if we don't act right now,' he urged.

A woman walks a dog next to the U.S.-Mexico border barrier along the Pacific Ocean on January 8, 2019 in Tijuana, Mexico
Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez slammed Trump in a statement after Tuesday night's speech, which e characterized as '[l]ies, fearmongering, finger-pointing, and a manufactured excuse for shutting down the government.'
'Using the Oval Office to deceive the American people and spout offensive, anti-immigrant rhetoric proves, once again, that Donald Trump is unfit to serve as president,' he said.
New Mexico Democratic Sen. Tom Udall said in a statement that Trump 'needs to end his shutdown now, before his reckless tantrum hurts more New Mexico families. New Mexicans didn’t hear anything new tonight from the president. Instead, they just heard more fear-mongering about immigrants, and dishonest and out-of-touch talk about the border from a president who doesn’t know the first thing about border communities.'
Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel praised Trump for 'fighting for a solution to fund our government while protecting American citizens, versus the approach of Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer which is to resist, resist, resist at all costs. It wasn’t always this way.'
But Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California claimed Trump 'knows that illegal border crossings are at record lows, down 75 percent from 2000.'
She said her party won't support 'spending billions and billions of dollars on a wall that won’t help protect our country. It’s not realistic. It’s not necessary. And it’s not where we should focus our attention or resources.'
Vice President Mike Pence signaled on Monday that Trump's approach would be softer than expected.
'There is a humanitarian and national security crisis,' Pence told reporters Monday amid concerns Trump would declare a national emergency. Pence would only say that the White House counsel's office was considering the idea.