The Democratic chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee said that he "would not rule out a wall in certain instances" after President Donald Trump proposed a new immigration and border security plan Saturday in an attempt to end the partial government shutdown.
"I don't think Democrats are opposed to any physical barriers," Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi said. "It's just the president constantly evolves his description of the wall, just as he indicated Mexico was going to pay for whatever was there. So what we have to do is sit down, work through this and let the public know exactly what we're talking about and what they can expect. And we're not there yet.”
Thompson added that he was a “believer in technology” on the southern border, saying, “Technology is the force multiplier for border security. If we do it right, then we can get -- I’m convinced -- the kind of border security that we need.”
(MORE: Trump would extend 'Dreamers' and TPS protection in exchange for full border wall funding)On Saturday, in an address from the White House, Trump proposed an immigration and border security plan in an effort to end the shutdown and "solve the crisis on the southern border."
Along with other border security measures that both parties support, the core of the plan includes $5.7 billion to build an additional 230 miles of a see-through steel barrier system -- "or a wall."
"This is not a 2,000-mile concrete structure from sea to sea. These are steel barriers in high-priority locations," Trump said.
(MORE: Some migrants say a wall wouldn't stop them from entering the US, but Customs and Border Protection says it's a key part of the solution)On "This Week," Thompson told co-anchor Martha Raddatz, "The notion that we can't have barriers is just something that's not true, but again ... you have to have a plan, and the plan that the president initially started with is not where he is now. And so we don't know where he will be tomorrow, but clearly, Democrats are for border security, but we're not for this constantly moving the ball just for a talking point."
In an effort to entice Democrats to support the deal, Trump on Saturday also proposed extending protections from deportation for three years for some 700,000 so-called "Dreamers," children brought to the U.S. illegally by their parents who were given a protected status under former President Barack Obama's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) executive order, and for Temporary Protected Status recipients whose status is currently facing expiration.
Thompson told Raddatz that Democrats will work with the president, but noted that he "can't pick what Democrats" he works with.
"We have picked our leaders and you have to work with our leaders," Thompson said, addressing the president directly. "And I encourage you to do that."
And Thompson put the blame for the shutdown on the president, saying he should re-open the government first.
“This is President Trump's shutdown,” Thompson said. “We should not be in this situation. Put the people back to work and let's negotiate border security, but don't hold those 800,000 employees hostage in this situation.”
(MORE: GOP Sen. James Lankford calls President Donald Trump's shutdown proposal a 'reasonable compromise')House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., both issued statements rejecting the president's proposal. Pelosi called the plan a "non-starter" and Schumer said Trump offering DACA protections in exchange for wall funding, after "it was the president who single-handedly" took them away in the first place, is "hostage taking."
(MORE: Some migrants say a wall wouldn't stop them from entering the US, but Customs and Border Protection says it's a key part of the solution)Thompson acknowledged that the country is facing a humanitarian crisis, but said that the administration has made the crisis at the border worse through Trump's policies.
"So if he accepts responsibility for what he's created, then we can fix it," Thompson said. He added "Democrats have always supported humanitarian efforts all around the world" and that "we are prepared to work through the humanitarian crisis."
The president's plan is expected to be taken up by the Senate this week, according to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.