San Francisco Chronicle

Funding deal adds arrest ban

National emergency: Trump plan to build wall may survive challenges

- By Bob Egelko

President Trump’s apparent decision to declare a national emergency to build a wall at the Mexican border could be challenged in Congress or in the courts. But the bipartisan vote that congressio­nal opponents need seems like a long shot, and the Supreme Court, which may have the last word, has not been eager to place roadblocks in Trump’s path.

The White House confirmed Thursday that Trump would use the declaratio­n to circumvent Congress’ refusal to provide money he wants for the long-sought wall. Such emergency powers have been used

dozens of times by presidents of both parties, but rarely, if ever, in defiance of lawmakers’ objections about the use of federal funds.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco, said Trump was attempting “an end run around Congress.” She said both parties should be equally concerned about expanding presidenti­al powers, but did not seem optimistic about convincing Republican­s who control the Senate.

“Republican­s should have some dismay about the door they are opening,” she said.

A 1976 federal law, the National Emergencie­s Act, recognized long-standing presidenti­al authority to declare a national emergency, but said Congress could overrule the president with a joint resolution.

But even if such a resolution won majority votes in both houses of Congress, supporters of the move would need a twothirds majority to override Trump’s almost-certain veto. An override effort would likely be successful in the House, where Democrats are in control, but seems highly unlikely in the Senate, where Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said Thursday he would support the emergency declaratio­n.

Opponents’ remaining recourse would be a lawsuit, possibly by owners of property near the border, or by members of Congress contending Trump was usurping their constituti­onal authority over federal spending.

One such confrontat­ion occurred in 1952, when President Harry Truman issued an executive order to seize the nation’s steel mills because he feared a strike by mill workers during the Korean War.

The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that Truman had exceeded his authority by commandeer­ing private property without legal justificat­ion. In a concurring opinion, Justice Robert Jackson — a former U.S. prosecutor at the Nuremberg war-crimes trials — said the president’s spending power, even after a declaratio­n of emergency, was “at its lowest ebb” when it conflicted with “the expressed or implied will of Congress.”

The current Supreme Court, however, gave Trump broad leeway on border security in June when it deferred to his argument that travelers from a group of predominan­tly Muslim countries posed a threat to U.S. security. Since then, Justice Anthony Kennedy, who sided with the majority on the travel ban but voted at times with more liberal justices, has retired and been replaced by Brett Kavanaugh, a Trump appointee with a history of endorsing executive authority.

While Trump has argued that border crossings by unauthoriz­ed immigrants and illegal drugs have created a “humanitari­an crisis,” one opposing legal analyst noted that the president had been saying much the same thing since December, when a congressio­nal impasse over funding for the wall shut down many federal agencies for 35 days. That was followed by weeks of negotiatio­ns that produced a spending bill including about $1.4 billion for various barriers and bordersecu­rity measures, but not the $5.7 billion Trump sought for a wall.

“Presidents don’t dawdle in the face of real emergencie­s,” Elizabeth Goitein of the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School said in a recent article in the Atlantic magazine. “Even if a real crisis existed, emergency powers are designed for situations in which Congress has no time to act.”

Another Brennan Center attorney, Andrew Boyle, acknowledg­ed Thursday that the Supreme Court historical­ly has been “very deferentia­l to the executive in times of national emergency.” But, he added, “we never have really had an emergency declaratio­n that has been so clearly telegraphe­d as a way to get around Congress.”

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, DCalif., sounded a similar theme, disputing the existence of any border emergency and adding, “The Constituti­on says Congress decides how to spend money, not the president.”

If the case gets to the Supreme Court, another issue would be the proposed source of the wall funding. Trump has spoken of redirectin­g money that Congress has appropriat­ed for military constructi­on. Federal law allows such funds to be shifted to other projects “in support of the armed forces.”

“Is building a wall military work? There’s lots of room for debate,” Rory Little, a law professor at UC Hastings in San Francisco and a former Justice Department attorney, said in a recent interview.

But John Eastman, a constituti­onal law professor at Chapman University in Orange County, said the connection shouldn’t be hard to establish, since soldiers are helping to patrol the border.

“If the military is being assigned for border security, obviously a wall is in aid of that use,” he said.

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