Lodi News-Sentinel

Brown, Trump clash over Guard deployment

California officials say Pentagon has confirmed National Guard funding as Trump lashes out

- By John Myers

SACRAMENTO — The awkward dance between California Gov. Jerry Brown and the federal government over the National Guard jerked back toward discord on Thursday, when President Donald Trump said he would refuse to pay for a new deployment of troops — just hours after his administra­tion said otherwise.

And a few hours later, California officials said they had received written confirmati­on from the Pentagon that the mission would indeed be funded.

Trump had earlier called Brown’s decision to approve 400 troops for a mission focused on combating transnatio­nal crime and drug smuggling a “charade” in a tweet. “We need border security and action, not words!” the president wrote.

A spokesman for Brown pointed to a tweet written Wednesday night by Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, thanking the California governor for his efforts. Trump was meeting on Thursday with Nielsen at his Mar-a-Lago estate not long after his tweet was posted.

A tweet later posted by the California National Guard said that almost three hours after Trump’s comment, the state received “written confirmati­on from the Pentagon” to fund the mission as outlined by Brown the day before.

“In short, nothing has changed today,” said a subsequent Guard tweet.

Brown was the last of the nation’s border governors to respond to Trump’s insistence earlier this month that National Guard troops were needed to assist with immigratio­n-related duties at the U.S.-Mexico border. And he has consistent­ly refused to allow California troops to engage in any mission related to federal immigratio­n law.

“This will not be a mission to build a new wall,” Brown wrote last week to Nielsen and Defense Secretary James N. Mattis. “It will not be a mission to round up women and children or detain

people escaping violence and seeking a better life.”

Exactly what the California operations will cost remains unclear, as state officials have said it will depend on decisions made once the mission begins. The funds would not be transferre­d to the state, but instead would be paid directly by the Department of Defense.

Trump has critiqued California several times over the past few days, often writing tweets that embrace the actions by some cities and counties to join his administra­tion’s lawsuit against the state’s sanctuary immigratio­n law. He made similar comments to reporters on Thursday afternoon.

 ?? GARY CORONADO/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? Left: Gov. Jerry Brown at the State Capitol building in Sacramento on Jan. 10, 2017.
GARY CORONADO/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH Left: Gov. Jerry Brown at the State Capitol building in Sacramento on Jan. 10, 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States