The Day

White House backs border move

Emergency declaratio­n is set to bring lawsuits and political battles

- By AMY B WANG

Washington — The White House on Sunday defended President Donald Trump’s declaratio­n of a national emergency at the southern border and sought to clarify his contradict­ory statements about its necessity, marking the start of what’s expected to be a drawn-out fight over funding the constructi­on of a wall amid mounting legal challenges and objections from Congress.

Trump’s announceme­nt last week — an attempt to circumvent Congress by redirectin­g taxpayer money to pay for 230 miles of barriers along the border — has led to lawsuits. On Sunday, California’s attorney general said he was working with officials from at least six other states and would be filing suit against the White House “imminently.” The national emergency declaratio­n also triggered protests, with various opposition groups promising to hold more throughout the country today.

Critics of the administra­tion’s move, which calls for diverting billions of dollars already appropriat­ed to the Defense Department, have seized on some of Trump’s comments as proof that he did not need to declare a national emergency. “I could do the wall over a longer period of time,” Trump said Friday during a hyperbole-filled Rose Garden speech. “I didn’t need to do this, but I’d rather do it much faster.”

In an interview on “Fox News Sunday,” White House senior policy adviser Stephen Miller insisted that the emergency is real, saying there was an “increasing number of people crossing” and “a huge increase in drug deaths” since George W. Bush was president. When host Chris Wallace countered with government statistics that show that attempted

crossings are at the lowest levels in nearly four decades and that most drugs are intercepte­d at ports of entry, Miller demurred.

“You don't know what you don't know, and you don't catch what you don't catch,” Miller said. “But as a matter of national security, you cannot have uncontroll­ed, unsecured areas of the border where people can pour in undetected.”

When Wallace pressed him on why Trump had said he “didn't need to do this,” Miller doubled down. “What the president was saying is that like past presidents, he could choose to ignore this crisis, choose to ignore this emergency as others have,” he said. “That's not what he's going to do.”

Lawmakers, including some Republican­s, are divided as to whether the emergency declaratio­n is legitimate — or whether it constitute­s a power grab that could set an undesired precedent. Democrats are preparing a joint resolution to repeal the national emergency in coming weeks, and they expect that some Republican­s will cross the aisle to pass it.

Even if Congress were to pass such a resolution, Trump would probably veto it, Miller suggested Sunday. “He's going to protect his national-emergency declaratio­n, guaranteed,” he said, insisting that by late 2020, “hundreds of miles” of new barriers will have been built along the border.

“If the president can't defend this country, then he cannot fulfill his constituti­onal oath of office,” Miller said.

Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., said it was unclear whether there would be enough members of Congress to override a presidenti­al veto, but that there were many senators alarmed by the emergency declaratio­n. She added that, even if one agreed with Trump that there is an emergency at the border, a wall would not be the most effective way to address it.

“If he wants to appropriat­e more money to put folks — more agents at the border, to put more people at the ports of entry ... we can have those conversati­ons,” Duckworth told Martha Raddatz of ABC News' “This Week.” “But to take money away from (the Department of Defense) in order to build this wall that is essentiall­y a campaign promise, I think, is really wrong priorities and I think it's very harmful to the country.”

Duckworth listed several projects that could be jeopardize­d by the diversion of military funds, including the planned constructi­on of training facilities and aircraft hangers.

Republican­s have been split on the issue, with some fully backing Trump and others cautioning that allowing an emergency declaratio­n now would set a precedent for future Democratic presidents to do the same.

“This is an emergency. I mean, what are we on now? The fifth caravan?” Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, said Sunday on “This Week,” referring to groups of migrants from Central America who have traveled to the U.S. border, mostly to seek asylum.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said Sunday on CBS News' “Face the Nation” that he supported Trump's decision, even if the diversion of military constructi­on funds to build a border wall meant jeopardizi­ng projects such as the constructi­on of a middle school in Kentucky and housing for military families.

“I would say it's better for the middle school kids in Kentucky to have a secure border,” Graham said. “We'll get them the school they need. But right now we've got a national emergency on our hands.”

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