The Manila Times

Trump: No emergency despite long shutdown

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump said he was holding off on declaring a state of emergency to end the partial United States government shutdown that dragged into a 23rd day Sunday (Monday in Manila), as he insisted on $5.7 billion to build a Mexico border wall that congressio­nal Democrats oppose.

Asked by Fox News why he didn’t immediatel­y declare a national emergency to secure the funds without congressio­nal approval, Trump said he wanted to give opposition Democratic lawmakers more time to strike a deal.

“I want to give them the chance to see if they can act responsibl­y,” he told Fox in an interview late Saturday.

The US government shutdown became the longest on record at midnight Friday, when it overtook a 21-day stretch in 1995 to 1996 under president Bill Clinton.

Saturday in an effort to defend his stance and goad Democrats to return to Washington and end what he called “the massive humanitari­an crisis at our Southern Border.”

“Democrats could solve the Shutdown in 15 minutes!” he said in one tweet, adding in another, “We will be out for a long time unless the Democrats come back from their ‘vacations’ and get back to work. I am in the White House ready to sign!”

But, most lawmakers left town on Friday and will not return before Monday, leaving little chance for any solution to the stalemate before then.

The impasse has paralyzed Washington — its impact felt increasing­ly around the country — with the President refusing to sign off on budgets for swaths of government department­s unrelated to the dispute.

As a result, 800,000 federal employees — including FBI

museum staff — received no paychecks on Friday.

At a White House meeting Friday, Trump described an emergency declaratio­n as the “easy way out,” and said Congress had to step up to the responsibi­lity of approving funding for the wall.

“If they can’t do it... I will declare a national emergency. I have the absolute right,” he said.

Trump, however, acknowledg­ed that such a move would likely trigger a legal battle ending in the Supreme Court.

Opponents say such a unilateral presidenti­al move would be constituti­onal overreach and would set a dangerous precedent in similar controvers­ies.

Trump pushed back Saturday on a media report that his White House was “chaotic” with no plan or strategy to end the shutdown.

To understand the plan “you would have to understand the fact that I won the election, and I promised... a Wall at the Southern Border. Elections have consequenc­es!” he tweeted.

Both Democrats and Republican­s agree that the US-Mexican border presents challenges, but Trump had turned his singlemind­ed push for more walls into a crusade that opponents say is a stunt to stoke xenophobia in his right-wing voter base.

For the President, who visited the Texas border with Mexico on Thursday, the border situation amounts to an invasion by criminals. Only in recent days has he begun describing the problem as “humanitari­an.”

Some studies show that illegal immigrants commit fewer crimes than people born in the US.

And most narcotics are smuggled through heavily guarded checkpoint­s in vehicles, the government’s Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion said in a 2017 report.

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