The Jerusalem Post

US Supreme Court lets Trump use disputed funds for border wall

- • By LAWRENCE HURLEY

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The US Supreme Court on Friday handed President Donald Trump a victory by letting his administra­tion redirect $2.5 billion in money approved by Congress for the Pentagon to help build his promised wall along the US-Mexico border even though lawmakers refused to provide funding.

The conservati­ve-majority court on a 5-4 vote with the court’s liberals in dissent blocked in full a ruling by a federal judge in California barring the Republican president from spending the money on the basis that Congress did not specifical­ly authorize the funds to be spent on the wall project fiercely opposed by Democrats and Mexico’s government.

“Wow! Big VICTORY on the Wall. The United States Supreme Court overturns lower court injunction, allows Southern Border Wall to proceed. Big WIN for Border Security and the Rule of Law!” Trump tweeted just minutes after the court acted.

A brief order explaining the court’s decision said the government “made a sufficient showing” that the groups challengin­g the decision did not have grounds to bring a lawsuit.

“Today’s decision to permit the diversion of military funds for border wall constructi­on will wall off and destroy communitie­s, public lands, and waters in California, New Mexico, and Arizona,” said Gloria Smith, an attorney with environmen­tal group the Sierra Club, which sued to block the funds.

In a highly unusual move, Trump on February 15 declared a national emergency in a bid to fund the wall without congressio­nal approval, an action Democrats said exceeded his powers under the US Constituti­on and usurped the authority of Congress. The administra­tion has said it plans to redirect $6.7 billion from the Department­s of Defense and Treasury toward wall constructi­on under the emergency declaratio­n after failing to convince Congress to provide the money, including the $2.5 billion in Pentagon funding. Congress earlier failed to provide $5.7 billion in wall funding demanded by Trump in a showdown in which the president triggered a 35-day partial shutdown of the federal government that ended in January.

The administra­tion said a court decision was needed quickly because it needs to spend the money before the end of September, when the federal government’s fiscal year ends.

The wall is part of Trump’s hardline immigratio­n policies that are central to his 2020 re-election bid and has said it is needed to curb illegal immigratio­n and drug traffickin­g across the southern border. Democrats have called the wall immoral, ineffectiv­e and expensive.

The Southern Border Communitie­s Coalition, a group advocating for people living in border areas, joined the Sierra Club in suing to try to block Trump’s action. The challenger­s have said the wall would be disruptive to the environmen­t in part because it could worsen flooding problems and have a negative impact on wildlife.

US District Judge Haywood Gilliam ruled in May in Oakland that the administra­tion’s proposal to build parts of the border wall in California, New Mexico and Arizona with money appropriat­ed for the Defense Department to use in the fight against illegal drugs was unlawful. The judge issued an injunction barring use of the Pentagon funds for a border wall. The administra­tion asked the injunction barring use of the funds be put on hold pending an appeal but the San Francisco-based 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals declined to do so.

 ?? (Leah Millis/Reuters) ?? US PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP’s planned barrier along the US-Mexican border moves forward on Friday after the Supreme Court ruled that his administra­tion may redirect $2.5 billion.
(Leah Millis/Reuters) US PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP’s planned barrier along the US-Mexican border moves forward on Friday after the Supreme Court ruled that his administra­tion may redirect $2.5 billion.

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