San Francisco Chronicle

Brown says terms reached for Guard

- By Carolyn Lochhead Carolyn Lochhead is The San Francisco Chronicle’s Washington correspond­ent. Email: clochhead@sfchronicl­e.com

WASHINGTON — Gov. Jerry Brown sought to tamp down any conflict with the Trump administra­tion over sending California National Guard troops to the Mexican border, even as he dismissed a taunting tweet from the president Tuesday and described heightened concerns about illegal immigratio­n as the province of “very low-life politician­s.”

“I think we’re pretty close to an agreement” on deploying Guard troops, Brown told reporters at the National Press Club after administra­tion officials said the state had rejected some of the duties federal officials want the Guard to perform.

Trump, who initially tweeted thanks to Brown last week after the governor agreed to deploy 400 Guard troops if they didn’t enforce immigratio­n law, issued a tweet early Tuesday complainin­g about limits California was setting.

“Looks like Jerry Brown and California are not looking for safety and security along their very porous Border,” Trump tweeted from his Florida resort, Mar-aLago. “He cannot come to terms for the National Guard to patrol and protect the Border. The high crime rate will only get higher. Much wanted Wall in San Diego already started!”

Brown characteri­zed Washington’s focus on the border and deportatio­ns as “just an inflammato­ry football that very low-life politician­s like to exploit.”

He downplayed any difference­s with the administra­tion over the Guard’s mission. “There’s been a little back and forth, as you always get with bureaucrat­s,” Brown said. He added that the California Guard “will have plenty to do” in the areas where he wants to point them — drug, gun and human traffickin­g law enforcemen­t.

Indeed, Brown said, the state and the administra­tion have “already come to terms. As far as I understand it — we haven’t gotten written confirmati­on — our National Guard general has been in touch with the National Guard people in Washington, and from his perspectiv­e, he knows what his mission is. He’s ready to go.”

The exchange came one day after the Associated Press reported that California had rejected the federal government’s initial plan for Guard troops because it was too closely tied to immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

The state rejected letting California Guard troops support the Border Patrol in several areas, including repairing vehicles, controllin­g surveillan­ce cameras and operating radios, the AP reported, citing two unnamed U.S. officials.

Trump asked Brown and the Republican governors of Arizona, New Mexico and Texas earlier this month to send a total of 2,000 to 4,000 Guard troops to the border to intercept people trying to enter the country illegally. The other governors quickly agreed without setting conditions on their forces’ duties.

Brown said his goals for the Guard were in sync with the administra­tion’s desire to fight cross-border crime, but described as “totalitari­an” any effort to deport people en masse who are integrated into California’s economy.

“Trying to stop drugs, human traffickin­g and guns going to Mexico to the cartels — that sounds to me like fighting crime,” Brown said. “Trying to catch some desperate mothers and children or minors coming from Central America — that sounds like something else.”

Also on Tuesday, Brown made clear that he was more than ready to challenge the Trump administra­tion on vehicle emissions standards, saying the president and Environmen­tal Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt will be long gone by the time courts resolved any California challenge to the standards.

“The idea that California is going to roll back auto emissions standards is absurd,” Brown said.

Pruitt issued formal notice last month that the administra­tion will seek to roll back the clean car standards for model years 2022 to 2025, which California helped set.

Brown said the Chinese government is seeking to dominate the electric vehicle market, and he accused Pruitt and the administra­tion of “collaborat­ing in shifting the auto industry to China.”

He dismissed Pruitt’s move as “another temporary kerfuffle. The hard facts on the ground are that we have to intensify our vehicle emission standards, not weaken them.”

The governor said the California Air Resources Board is open to altering the rules to give automakers some “flexibilit­y” to meet the standards, but that California is not about to back away from them, and will sue the federal government if necessary.

“We have so many lawsuits now (against the Trump administra­tion) that a few more doesn’t make any difference,” Brown said.

 ?? Alex Wong / Getty Images ?? Despite President Trump’s critical tweet, Gov. Jerry Brown said in Washington that California’s guardsmen will focus on border drugs, guns and traffickin­g.
Alex Wong / Getty Images Despite President Trump’s critical tweet, Gov. Jerry Brown said in Washington that California’s guardsmen will focus on border drugs, guns and traffickin­g.

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