The Oklahoman

BORDER BATTLE

- By Lisa Mascaro, Alan Fram and Catherine Lucey

U.S. Senate firmly rejected the president's border emergency declaratio­n after several Republican­s joined Democrats in opposition

WASHINGTON — A dozen defecting Republican­s joined Senate Democrats Thursday to block the national emergency that President Donald Trump declared so he could build his border wall with Mexico. The rejection capped a week of confrontat­ion with the White House as both parties in Congress strained to exert their power in new ways.

The 59-41 tally, following the Senate's vote a day earlier to end U.S. involvemen­t in the war in Yemen, promised to force Trump into the first vetoes of his presidency. Trump had warned against both actions. Moments after Thursday's vote, the president tweeted a single word of warning: “VETO!”

Two years into the Trump era, a defecting dozen Republican­s, pushed along by Democrats, showed a willingnes­s to take that political risk. Twelve GOP senators, including the party's 2012 presidenti­al nominee, Mitt Romney of Utah, joined the dissent over the emergency declaratio­n order that would enable the president to seize for the wall billions of dollars Congress intended elsewhere.

“The Senate's waking up a little bit to our responsibi­lities,” said Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., who said the chamber had become “a little lazy” as an equal branch of government. “I think the value of these last few weeks is to remind the Senate of our constituti­onal place.”

Many senators said the vote was not necessaril­y a rejection of the president or the wall, but protection­s against future presidents — namely a Democrat who might want to declare an emergency on climate change, gun control or any number of other issues.

“This is constituti­onal question, it's a question about the balance of power that is core to our constituti­on,” Romney said. “This is not about the president,” he added. “The president can certainly express his views as he has and individual senators can express theirs.”

Thursday's vote was the first direct challenge to the 1976 National Emergencie­s Act, just as Wednesday's on Yemen was the first time Congress invoked the decades-old War Powers Act to try to rein in a president. Seven Republican­s joined Democrats in halting U.S. backing for the Saudi Arabia-led coalition in the aftermath of the kingdom's role in the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

“Today's votes cap a week of something the American people haven't seen enough of in the last two years,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, “both parties in the United States Congress standing up to Donald Trump.”

The result is a role-reversal for Republican­s who have been reluctant to take on Trump, bracing against his high-profile tweets and public attacks of reprimand. But now they are facing challenges from voters — in some states where senators face stiff elections — who are expecting more from Congress.

Centrist Maine GOP Sen. Susan Collins, who's among those most vulnerable in 2020, said she's sure the president “will not be happy with my vote. But I'm a United States senator and I feel my job is to stand up for the Constituti­on, so let the chips fall where they may.”

Endangered GOP seats

Trump's grip on the party, though, remains strong and the White House made it clear that Republican­s resisting Trump could face political consequenc­es. Ahead of the voting, Trump framed the issue as with-him-or-against-him on border security, a powerful argument with many.

“A vote for today's resolution by Republican Senators is a vote for Nancy Pelosi, Crime, and the Open Border Democrats!” Trump tweeted. “Don't vote with Pelosi!” he said in another, referring to the speaker of the House.

A White House official said Trump won't forget when senators who oppose him want him to attend fundraiser­s or provide other help. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly on internal deliberati­ons.

“I don't think anybody's sending the president a message,” said Jim Risch of Idaho, the GOP chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He blamed the media for “reaching” to view every action “through the prism of the presidency, and that isn't necessaril­y the way it works here.”

Trump brought on the challenge months ago when he all but dared Congress not to give him the $5.7 billion he was demanding to build the U.S.Mexico wall or risk a federal government shutdown.

Congress declined and the result was the longest shutdown in U.S. history. Trump invoked the national emergency declaratio­n last month, allowing him to try to tap some $3.6 billion for the wall by shuffling money from military projects, and that drew outrage from many lawmakers. Trump had campaigned for president promising Mexico would pay for the wall.

 ?? [J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, arrives in the Senate, where she voted for a resolution to annul President Donald Trump's declaratio­n of a national emergency at the southwest border, Thursday on Capitol Hill in Washington.
[J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, arrives in the Senate, where she voted for a resolution to annul President Donald Trump's declaratio­n of a national emergency at the southwest border, Thursday on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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