Los Angeles Times

Trump is still pushing his wall

- Rom the earliest days

Fof his first campaign, Donald Trump seized on the constructi­on of a “beautiful” wall along the U.S.-Mexico border as a solution to what he asserted was the dangerous and costly problem of illegal immigratio­n.

The wall, which became a rallying cry for his supporters, was a symbol of Trump’s resolve to act where he said others had failed and to significan­tly alter how the U.S. handles immigratio­n. It told the world in the clearest possible way that, under Trump, a nation founded on immigratio­n would no longer be so welcoming to outsiders.

In the four years since, however, Trump’s multibilli­on-dollar white elephant of a campaign promise has been dogged by all manner of challenges and setbacks. The most recent is a decision by the Pentagon’s inspector general to investigat­e how a North Dakota constructi­on firm, which critics say did not meet the bid standards, won a $400-million federal contract to build 31 miles of the wall in the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge in southern Arizona. It’s probably no coincidenc­e that the contract was awarded after heavy lobbying by Trump on behalf of Fisher Sand and Gravel, whose owner, Tommy Fisher, has been a vocal and generous backer of the president and his immigratio­n enforcemen­t policies.

Fisher also is involved in another border wall imbroglio. His company, working with an anti-immigratio­n nonprofit, bought private property in south Texas on which it planned to build 3.1 miles of border fencing. That project has been hit with two court injunction­s over charges that the wall builders had not received permits to do the work in an environmen­tally sensitive area. Ironically, one of the legal challenges was filed by the U.S. Justice Department on behalf of the joint U.S.-Mexico entity overseeing the Rio Grande, which argues that the builders failed to submit sufficient studies about the wall’s impact on flooding. So yes, the Trump administra­tion is suing one of Trump’s favorite backers working on one of Trump’s favorite projects. Just imagine the president sputtering over his Twitter keyboard.

Separately, a state court also blocked the project after a legal challenge by the National Butterfly Center over the wall’s potential degradatio­n of the insects’ habitat.

Those recent controvers­ies are a reminder that, fortunatel­y, Trump has made little headway on the wall. Congress has refused most of his funding requests, which led Trump to declare a national emergency where none exists to use tax dollars to build the wall anyway. While the Supreme Court has lifted an injunction (although the lawsuit continues) against Trump’s plan to shift $2.5 billion in Defense Department anti-drug traffickin­g funds to the project, lower courts halted his efforts to shift an additional $3.6 billion allocated for military constructi­on needs to build the wall.

None of those lawsuits, by the way, address the fundamenta­l issue of whether a wall will do much to limit illegal immigratio­n, which seems unlikely, given that walls are readily breached and that most people living illegally in this country came in with valid visas but never left.

As it is, the administra­tion didn’t begin constructi­on of any wall or fencing where none previously existed until this fall, and even then it built only an eight-mile segment in Texas. Although the government has managed to erect a total of about 93 miles of new fencing, nearly all of it updates or replaces existing barriers. Still, the administra­tion is pressing forward with what seems like desperatio­n to build up to 500 miles of new wall by the end of 2020, which means the wall will probably, once again, be a major campaign issue in the coming year.

Trump won election in 2016 by exploiting racial and social difference­s, demonizing outsiders and tapping into a disquietin­g national undercurre­nt of class and political resentment. No one should look forward to a repeat of that toxicity. Trump’s strategy of seeking to lead the United States by dividing it has exposed a darkness in our national politics. It doesn’t take handwritin­g on a wall to understand how dangerous, and counterpro­ductive, that can be.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States