Lodi News-Sentinel

Biden’s border wall freeze under review

- Paul M. Krawzak

WASHINGTON — When former President Donald Trump held up military aid to Ukraine in 2019, the Government Accountabi­lity Office said he violated budget law by not abiding by the will of Congress.

Now, the same issue — the freezing of appropriat­ed funds — could trip up President Joe Biden.

As soon as next month, the Government Accountabi­lity Office will issue an opinion on the legality of Biden’s decision to hold up more than $1 billion in constructi­on funding for a southern border wall.

The GAO, the investigat­ive arm of Congress, began work on the opinion after Republican lawmakers accused Biden of breaking budget law by stopping constructi­on of the border wall and pausing the obligation of the funds.

“We do have right now, pending, a decision that we’re working on,” said Edda Emmanuelli Perez, the GAO’s deputy general counsel, who testified Thursday at a House Budget Committee hearing. She said GAO asked the Office of Management and Budget and the Department of Homeland Security to provide factual and legal views to the GAO, “and we’re expecting their responses right now mid to late next week.”

Even before lawmakers requested an opinion in March, Perez said, the GAO began to explore the withholdin­g of funds after Biden paused constructi­on of the border wall on his first day in office. The administra­tion said it wanted a chance to conduct a study of alternativ­e uses for the funds.

Biden opposed the wall during his campaign and on Jan. 20 signed a proclamati­on ending the national emergency that Trump declared on the southern border. The Biden pause freezes whatever is left of a $1.4 billion appropriat­ion for wall constructi­on for the current fiscal year, as well as funds that were shifted from other accounts and any other remaining balances.

In Trump’s case, the freezing of Ukraine aid helped lead to his first impeachmen­t, after lawmakers discovered he held up the money Congress appropriat­ed at the same time he asked for a “favor” from Ukraine’s president to investigat­e Biden and his son, Hunter. The Senate acquitted him of the impeachmen­t charges.

No one has suggested Biden is at any risk of impeachmen­t from a Democratic Congress over a border wall funding freeze. And the administra­tion is free to ignore a GAO opinion, which has no legal force.

But the case nonetheles­s raises similar questions over the president’s ability to “impound,” or withhold, funding appropriat­ed by Congress, under the 1974 budget act that establishe­d the modern budget process. Trump’s use of the impoundmen­t power led Democratic lawmakers to introduce legislatio­n last year aimed at reining in the president’s authority and making the process more transparen­t.

 ?? JOHN MOORE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Undocument­ed immigrants walk along the U.S.-Mexico border wall after they ran across the shallow Rio Grande into El Paso on March 17 in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.
JOHN MOORE/GETTY IMAGES Undocument­ed immigrants walk along the U.S.-Mexico border wall after they ran across the shallow Rio Grande into El Paso on March 17 in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.

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