Jamaica Gleaner

Can Trump declare emergency to build his wall?

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THE TRUMP administra­tion is weighing using a national emergency declaratio­n to circumvent Congress and the budget stalemate and force constructi­on of the president’s long-promised southern border wall.

“We’re looking at a national emergency because we have a national emergency,” President Donald Trump told reporters Sunday amid stalled negotiatio­ns. He said during a press conference Friday that he would prefer to win the money he’s demanding via Congress, but could “absolutely” call an emergency “and build it very quickly”.

Such a move would be a dramatic escalation of the current showdown, which has forced a partial government shutdown that’s now in its third week.

The administra­tion has spent months trying to figure out how the president might be able to move forward with the wall – the central promise of his 2016 campaign – if Congress refuses to give him the money.

As early as last March, Trump was publicly floating the idea of using the military for the task. “Building a great Border Wall, with drugs (poison) and enemy combatants pouring into our Country, is all about National Defense. Build WALL through M!” he tweeted then.

But it’s Congress – not the president – that controls the country’s purse strings and must appropriat­e money he wants to spend.

Enter the emergency declaratio­n, an option the White House counsel’s office is currently reviewing. Among the laws Trump could turn to is Section 2808 of the Title 10 US Code pertaining to military constructi­on.

According to the statute, if the president declares an emergency “that requires use of the armed forces,” the defence secretary “may undertake military constructi­on projects, and may authorise the secretarie­s of the military department­s to undertake military constructi­on projects, not otherwise authorized by law that are necessary to support such use of the armed forces”.

Pentagon budget officials are analysing the 2019 constructi­on budget to determine how many unobligate­d dollars would be available to use for the wall if Trump settles on a declaratio­n. Under the provision, only those constructi­on budget funds that are not already obligated to other constructi­on projects could be used for the wall.

There are more than 100 such provisions giving the president access to special powers in emergencie­s. And Congress has typically afforded the president broad authority to determine what constitute­s an emergency and what does not, said Elizabeth Goitein, co-director of the liberty and national security programme at the Brennan Center for Justice.

“Absolutely, it’s an abuse of power for the president to declare a national emergency when none exists and to use it to try to get around the democratic process,” she said. “But we are in a situation where our legal system for emergency powers almost invites that kind of abuse.”

 ??  ?? US President Donald Trump.
US President Donald Trump.

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