New York Daily News

FIGHT GOES ON

Pelosi: Wall veto will fail, but vote still vital

- BY JILLIAN JORGENSEN AND CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi acknowledg­ed Wednesday that Congress all but certainly won’t be able to block President Trump’s border wall veto, but asserted she will force a vote on the matter anyway because the President’s attempt to “deface” the Constituti­on shouldn’t go unanswered.

“Whether we can succeed with the number of votes is not the point,” Pelosi said during a news conference in Manhattan when asked why she has set a March 26 vote to override Trump’s veto. “We are establishi­ng the intent of Congress. The President has decided to be in defiance of the Constituti­on, to deface it, with his actions.”

Trump’s Friday veto — the first of his presidency — overturned a bipartisan resolution passed by both chambers of Congress that would have rescinded the national emergency he declared Feb. 15 in an attempt to bankroll his coveted Mexican border wall without congressio­nal approval.

In order to kill Trump’s veto, the House and the Senate would need twothirds of its members to unite against it — a virtual impossibil­ity, considerin­g a majority of Republican­s side with the President.

However, Pelosi said voting on the veto sends a message to Trump and helps propel the litany of legal challenges filed against his emergency order.

“Establishi­ng the intent of Congress will help us in the court of law and in the court of public opinion,” the speaker said.

Twelve Republican senators and 18 Republican House members — far more than initially expected — broke ranks and joined Democrats in voting to undo Trump’s emergency order last week, arguing he had acted unconstitu­tionally by circumvent­ing the will of Congress.

Earlier this year, the President signed spending legislatio­n approved by lawmakers that earmarked only $1.3 billion for border fencing and general border security.

Nonetheles­s, the White House maintains Trump’s emergency order allows him to unlock about $8 billion from federal reserve budgets and use it to fund the border wall he used to promise Mexico would pay for.

Trump’s do-it-alone insistence on getting his longpromis­ed wall built is widely unpopular, and some Democrats have suggested impeachmen­t may be an appropriat­e response if he continues on that path.

However, Pelosi (D-Calif.) — whose consent is mandatory to launch impeachmen­t proceeding­s — recently shot down the prospect of impeaching Trump.

“Unless there’s something so compelling and overwhelmi­ng and bipartisan, I don’t think we should go down that path, because it divides the country,” Pelosi said in an interview with The Washington Post this month. “And he’s just not worth it.”

 ??  ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, speaking in the city Wednesday, said any attempt to impeach President Trump would further divide the country “and he’s just not worth it.”
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, speaking in the city Wednesday, said any attempt to impeach President Trump would further divide the country “and he’s just not worth it.”

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