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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

WWII vets allowed to visit memorial

RNC offers to pay for guards at site

Pedestrians walk past a barricade blocking entry to the World War II Memorial in Washington on Wednesday. (Associated Press)
Brett Zongker Associated Press

WASHINGTON – Veterans groups that planned trips to the World War II Memorial on the National Mall are being granted access despite the government shutdown, while the Republican National Committee offered Wednesday to pay for guards to keep the site open.

More than 125 World War II veterans from Mississippi and Iowa were initially kept out of the memorial Tuesday, but members of Congress intervened and helped push aside barriers to escort the veterans into the memorial. National parks across the country closed Tuesday due to the federal budget impasse.

Now the World War II Memorial has become a political symbol in the bitter fight between Republicans and Democrats over the government shutdown and who is at fault.

RNC Chairman Reince Priebus went to the memorial Wednesday and said the committee would pay to keep five guards on duty to keep it open.

“The Obama administration has decided they want to make the government shutdown as painful as possible, even taking the unnecessary step of keeping the Greatest Generation away from a monument built in their honor,” he said.

The Democratic National Committee quickly responded.

“We’ve already been working on a plan to open the memorial – and the entire government – after the GOP caused them to close,” DNC spokesman Mo Elleithee said. “It’s called a clean funding resolution, and it sounds like the votes are there if the speaker would just call for a vote. It would save the economy a lot of money and get the memorial and government open a whole lot faster.”