Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

House favors bid for repeal of emergency

State’s lawmakers oppose resolution, support Trump

- DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS

WASHINGTON — The House on Tuesday approved a resolution to overturn President Donald Trump’s declaratio­n of a national emergency on the southern border, escalating a clash over whether he was abusing his powers to advance his presidenti­al campaign pledge.

The 245-182 vote fell well short of the two-thirds majority that would be required to overcome a presidenti­al veto, which Trump has threatened. Thirteen Republican­s sided with Democrats.

The four House members from Arkansas, all Republican­s, supported the president’s declaratio­n.

In a floor speech, Rep. Rick Crawford of Jonesboro said Trump had “full statutory authority” to declare an emergency.

“The only reason this legislatio­n is being considered on the floor today is to obstruct the president’s agenda. The president has made it clear that he will use all statutory tools at his disposal to secure the border, and that is exactly what he’s doing in declaring this emergency,” Crawford said.

Two others released written statements after Tuesday’s

vote.

“While I would prefer Congress to appropriat­e these funds to combat the crisis on our southwest border, the president does have the authority to reprogram funds and I believe their use would not undermine the priorities of our military and law enforcemen­t,” Rep. French Hill of Little Rock said.

“The humanitari­an and security crisis on our southern border must be addressed,” said Rep. Steve Womack of Rogers. “I support the commander-in-chief’s work to ensure a strong, safe and secure border.”

Rep. Bruce Westerman of Hot Springs did not issue a statement, a spokesman said.

Democrats argued that Trump’s claim of a crisis at the border was baseless and that he was embarking on the road to dictatorsh­ip by unilateral­ly declaring an emergency to try to get money from U.S. taxpayers to fulfill a campaign promise.

“We are not going to give any president, Democratic or Republican, a blank check to shred the

Constituti­on of the United States,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said on the floor before the vote. Holding up a pocket copy of the Constituti­on, she asked Republican­s: “Is your oath of office to Donald Trump, or is your oath of office to the Constituti­on of the United States?”

Republican­s countered that Democrats were ignoring a very real crisis at the border and said Trump was within his rights to declare a national emergency, since he was acting under provisions of a law passed by Congress, the National Emergencie­s Act of 1976.

“There is a national emergency at the southern border that the Democrats will declare today doesn’t exist,” said House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif. “The president has the authority to do it, and we will uphold him.”

Though presidents have declared 58 emergencie­s under the law, this is the first aimed at acquiring money

for an item Congress has explicitly refused to finance, according to Elizabeth Goitein, co-director for national security at New York University Law School’s Brennan Center for Justice. This is also the first time Congress has cast votes on whether to annul an emergency declaratio­n, she said.

Trump issued the emergency declaratio­n on Feb. 15 as part of a deal to keep the government open after a 35day partial shutdown over Christmas and much of January. The president agreed to sign a spending bill to keep the government funded through Sept. 30 while providing $1.375 billion for 55 miles of fencing along the border in Texas, but he said he needed billions more.

The administra­tion plans to redirect an additional $6.7 billion from several sources, including $3.6 billion from military constructi­on projects that can be accessed via the emergency declaratio­n.

Now that the House has passed the disapprova­l resolution, the Senate will have about 18 days to take it up, a timeline set by the National Emergencie­s Act. The law also specifies that Senate passage takes only a simple majority, not the 60-vote supermajor­ity often required in the Senate.

That means four Republican votes would ensure passage of the disapprova­l resolution — presuming that Democrats stick together as expected. GOP Sens. Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski

of Alaska and Thom Tillis of North Carolina have announced plans to vote for the disapprova­l resolution.

Other Republican­s have also voiced concerns, including at a private lunch Tuesday with Vice President Mike Pence, during which about six senators spoke up with reservatio­ns, according to one person in attendance.

One of those senators was Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, who asked a Justice Department attorney about how a future Democratic president might be able to use similar emergency powers, according to an official briefed on the meeting, who requested anonymity to describe it.

Senators called it a “serious” discussion with Pence, one in which the vice president focused on trying to explain the rationale for the emergency declaratio­n and mollify concerns from rankand-file Republican­s that the reprogramm­ed funds would not hurt their local military installati­ons.

The vice president made the case that the wall was the issue Trump ran on in his campaign, and he argued that military constructi­on projects would not be jeopardize­d because the money could be replaced, according to the official briefed on the meeting.

“Let me tell you this, if it’s military constructi­on projects, we’ll back-fill that so fast, as soon as we get there,” said Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., chairman of the Appropriat­ions Committee, predicting

“no trouble” in providing new funds for the projects. “You can rest assured that issue won’t stay alive long.”

Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, the chief GOP vote counter, said there may be GOP attempts to amend the House measure, saying Republican­s “think they have amendments that would improve it.”

A White House document for media said Tuesday that the military constructi­on funds under the national emergency declaratio­n would be tapped only after the appropriat­ed money and other funding sources have been exhausted, sequencing that some Republican­s have pointed to as alleviatin­g some of their concerns.

CHINA, RUSSIA THREATS

Also Tuesday, the top U.S. general for homeland defense said he sees no military threat coming from the southern border with Mexico, but his focus is on “very real” threats from China and Russia.

Air Force Gen. Terrence O’Shaughness­y, commander of the U.S. Northern Command and North American Aerospace Defense Command, told a Senate committee that proposed barriers along the U.S.-Mexico border could increase security against any potential military threats coming from the south. But he said Russia’s advancemen­ts in training and capabiliti­es, and its intent to hold the U.S. at risk, present an urgent threat to America.

Democratic senators

on the Senate Armed Services Committee peppered O’Shaughness­y with questions about the need to divert the money from existing projects and questioned the validity of a national emergency declaratio­n.

“I’m concerned, very frankly, that this administra­tion is politicizi­ng our military and militarizi­ng our immigratio­n policy — in effect, using the troops under your command as political props, both in terms of declaring a fake emergency but also compromisi­ng our potential security by diverting them away from other assignment­s and missions that are absolutely necessary,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.

O’Shaughness­y, who visited the southern border Saturday with acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan, was careful to defer any assessment of the southern threat to the Department of Homeland Security, and Customs and Border Protection. He said those agencies believe that more fencing can affect the movement of drugs across the border.

O’Shaughness­y said he would defer to Homeland Security “on the character of the threat,” adding that Northern Command is trying to “be a good partner” as the other agencies take on the drug traffickin­g challenge. Asked if it is a national emergency, he said, it is a “national issue” that requires a “whole-of-government approach.”

Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., questioned whether Congress should allow Trump to use Pentagon money for a non-defense emergency.

“The threat isn’t military, and still we’ll take $6 billion out of the defense budget to deal with it?” said Kaine. “If we set that precedent, I certainly can foresee a day when a president is going to say 40,000 gun deaths a year are an emergency, and why don’t we take money out of the Pentagon budget to deal with that?”

Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, argued that the shipment of illegal drugs from Mexico into the U.S. has caused tens of thousands of deaths, and that it constitute­d an emergency. But he also endorsed O’Shaughness­y’s assertion that Russia’s expanding fleet of icebreaker­s in the Arctic presents a serious threat, and the U.S. needs to increase its capabiliti­es there.

The U.S. Coast Guard currently has one working Polar-class icebreaker ship, but there’s funding in the Defense Department budget to begin building more. Sullivan said the poor condition of the U.S. ship is a disgrace, and the U.S. needs more ability to counter Russia and China in the Arctic.

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