The public events would allow Trump the chance to use the bully pulpit to make his case that more than $5 billion in government funding is needed for a wall separating the U.S. and Mexico. Democrats have repeatedly rejected that funding request.
The trip would come on the 20th day of the shutdown if Congress does not pass a funding bill to reopen the closed parts of government before then, approaching the record set in the mid-1990s for longest shutdown.
Trump first floated the idea of a trip to the border while speaking to reporters during a post-Christmas trip to Iraq.
“I’ll be going to Texas,” he said. “We’re going to have a groundbreaking for the wall.”
Democrats have stymied the president’s demands for wall funding. Trump last week raised the possibility of declaring a national emergency to build the wall without congressional approval, a move that would be considered legally and politically questionable.
Vice President Pence and other top administration officials met twice over the weekend with congressional leadership staffers, but the meetings did not result in a breakthrough.
Democrats have accused Trump of manufacturing a crisis at the southwest border to justify his demand for a wall, one of the president’s biggest unfulfilled campaign promises.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) has said she plans to move ahead this week with votes on individual spending bills to reopen government agencies, without wall funding.
“The senseless uncertainty and chaos of the Trump Shutdown must end now,” she said in a statement last week.
Trump first visited the border last year, when he was shown prototype designs of a wall at a Department of Homeland Security facility near San Diego.