US shutdown means Trump has to serve up fast food at White House reception

The White House has laid out a dinner of pizzas and McDonald's burgers for a visiting college football team as chefs are furloughed for a government shutdown.

President Donald Trump serves up a feast of burgers and fast food in the White House.

President Donald Trump serves up a feast of burgers and fast food in the White House. Source: AP

US President Donald Trump has laid out a White House feast fit  silver platters heaped high with McDonald's quarter pounders and the red-and-white burger wrappers of Wendy's.

White House chefs normally would serve much fancier fare underneath the stern gaze of the portrait of Abraham Lincoln in the State Dining Room.

But they are furloughed, staying home without pay cheques as Trump fights with Congress over funding the federal government.
Yum Yum! A serve of  burgers in the White House.
Yum Yum! A serve of burgers in the White House. Source: AP
The White House said Trump himself sprang for what he pronounced to be "great American food" for the visiting Clemson Tigers, winners of the US college football championship.

"We have pizzas, we have 300 hamburgers, many, many french fries, all of our favourite foods," Trump told reporters, as one White House worker still on the job lit tapered candles.

"I want to see what's here when we leave, because I don't think it's going to be much," Trump said, before the players, dressed in dapper suits, flooded the room and piled their plates high.
Guests attending a reception for the Clemson Tigers grab fast food sandwiches in the State Dining Room of the White House.
Guests attending a reception for the Clemson Tigers grab fast food sandwiches in the State Dining Room of the White House. Source: AP
About a quarter of the federal government has been shut down for the past 24 days after Trump dug in on a campaign pledge to build a wall on the southern border with Mexico, demanding $US5.7 billion from Congress for the project.

Democrats have rejected his demand.

Trump told the players afterward that he did not want to postpone the event until after the shutdown - which is already the longest in history - ended.



 


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Published 16 January 2019 1:36pm


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