The West Bank-based Palestinian autonomy government will stop paying for electricity in the power-starved Gaza Strip and "dry up" the flow of funds to the territory's Hamas rulers, a senior official said Wednesday. Hamas seized Gaza in 2007, driving out forces loyal to Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. The takeover created a Hamas-run government in Gaza and an Abbas-led administration in parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank. After several failed reconciliation attempts, Abbas recently said he would pressure Hamas financially to force it to cede ground. The Palestinian leader was to meet Wednesday at the White House with President Donald Trump to discuss ways of restarting long-stalled Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. Steps against Hamas could bolster Abbas' claims that he speaks for all Palestinians. In the West Bank, a senior official said the Abbas government would stop paying for the electricity Israel sends to Gaza, worth at least $11 million a month. Hussein al-Sheikh, head of the Civil Affairs Department, said Hamas profits because it collects electricity payments from Gaza residents. "We are not going to continue financing the Hamas coup in Gaza," he told the Voice of Palestine radio station. Al-Sheikh said the aim was to "dry up Hamas' financial resources." He said efforts would be made not to harm services to Gaza's 2 million residents, but did not explain how that would be possible. Gaza residents have been enduring worsening power cuts — a result of border blockades by Israel and Egypt that were triggered by the Hamas takeover. Residents currently live with rolling blackouts — six hours on, 12 hours off — that have further crippled an economy devastated by conflict. Israel supplies electricity from 10 power lines that cover about 30 percent of Gaza's needs. Israel deducts the money from the taxes and customs it collects on behalf of the Abbas government. Egypt provides some electricity, but supplies are less reliable. Israel last week announced the Abbas government's intention to stop paying for Gaza electricity. Al-Sheikh's comments marked the first official Palestinian confirmation. Ahmed Majdalani, an Abbas aide, said that as a next step, the West Bank government would sharply reduce the amount of medicine it ships to Gaza every month. Majdalani alleged that Hamas is "selling the medicine and collecting the money." He said that only "necessary medicine" would be sent directly to Gaza hospitals. With such steps, Abbas risks a popular backlash against him in Gaza - even if he hopes the anger will be directed at Hamas. — AP