The Post

Trump accused of making wall ‘crisis’

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Top congressio­nal Democrats said yesterday that President Donald Trump ‘‘has chosen fear’’ in his drive to build a southern border wall and called on him to reopen the government shuttered because of the standoff over his demand for money for the barrier.

Speaking moments after Trump made his case for the wall in an Oval Office address, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told a national television audience that the president’s rhetoric had been ‘‘full of misinforma­tion and even malice’’.

Standing alongside her, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said America’s symbol ‘‘should be the Statute of Liberty, not a 30-foot wall.’’ He accused Trump of trying to ‘‘stoke fear and divert attention’’ from his tumultuous administra­tion.

The Democrats’ prime-time remarks were something of a debut for the newly empowered opposition. Less than a week after Democrats seized control of the House, Pelosi and Schumer stood side-by-side at a lectern in a joint appearance that appeared designed to emphasise their party’s unity.

They spoke moments after Trump warned of a ‘‘growing humanitari­an and security crisis’’ at the border with Mexico. He said it was ‘‘immoral’’ for politician­s ‘‘to do nothing and continue to allow more innocent people to be so horribly victimised’’ by the drugs and criminals he claims are streaming across the boundary.

Trump and the Democrats have been duelling during a partial government shutdown over his demands for – and their opposition to – $5.7 billion (NZ$8.5b) to begin building a border wall with Mexico. Some 800,000 federal employees are working without pay or have been furloughed at dozens of federal agencies, and each side is blaming the other for the closure.

Polls have shown that Trump’s proposed wall and the shutdown fight have played well with his die-hard conservati­ve supporters, but poorly with the general public.

Pelosi, D-Calif., said Trump forced the shutdown because of ‘‘his obsession’’ with a costly, ineffectiv­e wall.

‘‘President Trump must stop holding the American people hostage, must stop manufactur­ing a crisis and must reopen the government,’’ she said.

‘‘Most presidents have used Oval Office addresses for noble purposes,’’ said Schumer, D-N.Y. ‘‘This president just used the backdrop of the Oval Office to manufactur­e a crisis.’’

The Democrats’ remarks lasted just over four minutes, compared with more than nine minutes for Trump.

Vermont independen­t Senator Bernie Sanders delivered his own response on social media. Sanders said Trump ‘‘lies all the time,’’ citing the president’s assertions that Mexico would pay for the wall and his claims about the number of terrorists and amount of illegal drugs flowing across the border.

Sanders said true emergencie­s facing the US include the people who have insufficie­nt health care cover, college costs that are unaffordab­le for many and global warming.

‘‘Mr President, we don’t need to create artificial crises. We have enough real ones,’’ Sanders said. –

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 ??  ?? As seen from a window outside the Oval Office, President Donald Trump gives a primetime address about border security yesterday at the White House in Washington.
As seen from a window outside the Oval Office, President Donald Trump gives a primetime address about border security yesterday at the White House in Washington.

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