Wall Street tumbles as Trump tweet raises government shutdown risk

U.S. financial markets sagged Friday, compounding a selloff the day before, as President Trump threat’s to veto a $1.3 trillion spending bill raised the risk of a government shutdown.

The blue-chip Dow Jones industrial average fell 0.5 percent and the Nasdaq composite index dropped 0.9 percent in mid-morning trading, widening 2 percent slides on Thursday after Trump announced tariffs of 25 percent on some Chinese imports. The S&P 500 fluctuated between a net loss and a small gain.

The $1.3 trillion spending bill, which Trump criticized for not including sufficient funding for a wall he wants along the southwestern U.S. border or addressing the plight of undocumented immigrants who arrived in the U.S. as children, passed early Friday morning. Signing it would avert a shutdown when a temporary spending bill expires tonight, and the White House had assured Republican congressional leaders earlier that Trump would do so.

In a post on Twitter on Friday morning, however, the president shifted gears.

“I am considering a VETO,” he wrote. Congress isn’t in session today, and if Trump follows through on his threat, lawmakers could be forced to abandon a pre-Easter vacation and return to Washington.

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