Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Senate opposition to Trump crisis grows

- ALAN FRAM AND ANDREW TAYLOR Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Lisa Mascaro and David Sharp of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — Senate opponents of President Donald Trump’s declaratio­n of a national emergency at the Mexican border moved within a hair Thursday of having enough votes to prevail, and one Republican suggested he could face a rejection by the GOP-led chamber if he doesn’t change course.

Trump’s move would “turn a border crisis into a constituti­onal crisis,” veteran Sen. Lamar Alexander said on the Senate floor. But he stopped just short of saying he’d support a resolution blocking the president’s move.

Speaking later to reporters, Alexander, R-Tenn., warned about what might happen if Trump doesn’t settle for using other money he can access without declaring an emergency.

“He can build a wall and avoid a dangerous precedent and I hope he’ll do that,” Alexander said. “So that would change the voting situation if he would agree to do that.”

The Democratic-led House voted Tuesday to upend Trump’s move, which if left standing would let him circumvent Congress and funnel billions of extra dollars to build his proposed wall. The Senate is considerin­g the measure.

Exactly what the Senate will vote on remains unclear. Several Republican­s said privately that they were considerin­g several options for alternativ­e language, including making it harder for future presidents to divert federal dollars to projects of their choosing by declaring emergencie­s.

Republican­s say a Senate vote is likely in two weeks.

Trump has promised to veto the House-passed resolution. Congress appears all but certain to lack the two-thirds majorities in each chamber that would be needed to override his veto, but the showdown carries risks for GOP lawmakers.

Underscori­ng that, Trump warned Republican­s against challengin­g him.

“I really think that Republican­s that vote against border security and the wall, I think you know, I’ve been OK at predicting things, I think they put themselves at great jeopardy,” Trump said in excerpts of an interview with Fox News Channel’s Hannity show released Thursday.

While congressio­nal Republican are reluctant to challenge Trump, many say his move tramples Congress’ constituti­onal power to control spending. They also say it would set a precedent for future Democratic presidents to declare emergencie­s for their own purposes, and they worry that he would siphon money to barrier constructi­on from home-state projects.

Alexander, a three-term senator who will retire in 2021 and is known for reaching across the aisle, has no re-election worries.

“I support what the president wants to do on border security, but not the way he has been advised to do it,” said Alexander, 78. “It is unnecessar­y and unwise to turn a border crisis into a constituti­onal crisis about separation of powers.”

Presidents have declared 58 national emergencie­s under a 1976 law. But never has one declared an emergency after Congress had explicitly denied the money in question.

GOP Sens. Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Thom Tillis of North Carolina have said they will vote to derail the emergency declaratio­n. Just four would be needed to send the measure to Trump for his promised veto, assuming that all 47 Democrats and their independen­t allies vote as expected to confront the president.

By law, the resolution cannot be filibuster­ed and would need just a majority of 51 votes to pass the Senate.

Congress has voted to limit spending for barriers to just under $1.4 billion. Trump featured the wall as a central plank of his presidenti­al campaign and repeatedly said Mexico would pay for it, which hasn’t happened.

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