House GOP resolves to 'shut down the border or shut down the government' in 16 days

House GOP lawmakers offered affirmation Wednesday that a partial government shutdown could be in the offing in just 16 days largely over the immigration issue.

In a series of comments, House Speaker Mike Johnson and his Republican colleagues reiterated that their focus in the coming negotiations will be on making the border into an obligatory part of the government funding talks — when those talks resume in earnest.

But the group offered little clarity on what could be the path to compromise to avert a government shutdown and the economic costs such a stoppage could entail.

"What we saw today only made House Republicans more resolved," said Johnson in remarks to reporters near the US-Mexico border in Eagle Pass, Texas.

House Speaker Mike Johnson speaks with Republican members of Congress on Wednesday in Eagle Pass, Texas. Johnson led about 60 fellow Republicans in Congress on a visit to the Mexican border. (Eric Gay/AP Photo) · (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

"We want to get the border closed and secure first," he said of the House GOP priorities, with America’s fiscal stewardship named as his second priority.

House Republicans are highlighting record flows across the border, including a December that has reportedly seen a record 300,000 encounters between migrants and the US Border Patrol.

The comments Wednesday came alongside another reminder of Congress's predicament with the news that US government debt has now topped $34 trillion for the first time. Data from the Treasury Department showed the national debt hit the milestone on Dec. 29.

The wide-ranging talks are set to be further complicated by an ongoing debate over foreign aid to Ukraine and Israel. House Republicans have been deeply skeptical of additional funding for Ukraine and promised to consider it only if their preferred immigration measures are signed into law.

Meanwhile, some economic observers have begun to warn that a shutdown is now more likely than not, with Stifel chief Washington policy strategist Brian Gardner recently telling clients "our base case is a partial government shutdown beginning in late January."

BTIG director of policy research Isaac Boltansky said in a recent Yahoo Finance Live interview "government shutdown risks are real" but argues another round of fighting ultimately "should not matter to investors" unless it morphs into a protracted stoppage.

A hard line

Johnson's border comments Wednesday were echoed throughout the day by a range of other GOP lawmakers who drew a hard line on the issue.

"None of us want to shut down the government but all of us recognize that every penny we are giving to the Homeland Security Department at this point ... is hurting our national security," said Rep. Beth Van Duyne (R-Texas).