The Manila Times

Trump’s border wall ‘emergency’ faces tough legal hurdles

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WASHINGTON, DC: President Donald Trump’s declaratio­n of an emergency Friday to build a border wall immediatel­y drew legal challenges that could easily escalate into a landmark test of the balance of power between the White House and Congress.

Legal experts said it was “unpreceden­ted” for a president to use his emergency powers to overcome Congress’s refusal to fund his wishes, in this case a barrier on the US-Mexican border to keep out illegal immigrants.

They also questioned Trump’s categoriza­tion of the immigratio­n issue as a national emergency and his tapping military funds for a nonmilitar­y project.

Hours after the announceme­nt, the Trump administra­tion faced an investigat­ion by the House Judiciary committee and lawsuits from New York, California and the American Civil Liberties Union.

“President Trump is manufactur­ing a crisis and declaring a made- up ‘ national emergency’ in order to seize power and subvert the constituti­on,” said California Governor Gavin Newsome.

“California court.”

Trump said he expected a legal fight and predicted he would prevail.

“We will have a national emergency, and we will then be sued,” Trump said Friday. will see you in Washington, District of Columbia : US President Donald Trump speaks about a state of emergency from the Rose Garden of the White House February 15, 2019 in Washington, DC.

“Then we will end up in the Supreme Court, and hopefully we will get a fair shake, and we’ll win in the Supreme Court.”

Dangerous precedent

Trump invoked the 1976 National

Emergencie­s Act after Congress refused to allocate his requested $ 5.7 billion for a wall in a spending bill.

The White House says the emergency order empowers it to pull around $ 6.6 billion from other sources, mostly alreadyall­ocated

funds in the Defense Department budget.

Democrats accused the president of an unconstitu­tional power grab.

“The president’s actions clearly violate the Congress’s exclusive power of the purse,” Nancy

Pelosi and Chuck Schumer, the Democratic leaders in Congress, said in a joint statement.

It is a precedent- setting move, said American University law professor Jennifer Daskal, adding that the National Emergen-

cies Act had “never been used in that way, for good reason.”

Critics warn that Trump opened the door for future presidents to call on the act whenever they fail to get their way with Congress. A frustrated Democratic president might some day invoke it to get

- cies” of climate change and gun proliferat­ion.

The White House dismissed this argument, underscori­ng how a court showdown might proceed.

“This actually creates zero precedent. This is authority given to the president in law already,” said acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney.

“It’s not as if he just didn’t get what he wanted, so he is waving a magic wand and taking a bunch of money.”

A real ‘emergency’?

Any legal battle will focus on the definition of “emergency.”

The emergencie­s act “does not provide any explicit limitation­s on what does and does not constitute a national emergency,” Daskal told AFP.

Previous government­s have declared emergencie­s based on the act due to immediate threats such as the September 11, 2001 attacks and the 2009 outbreak of swine flu.

Trump said the emergency now criminals across the border.

In the abstract, he appears within his rights.

However, said Bobby Chesney, the associate dean at the University of Texas School of Law, “litigation won’t be in abstract.”

“The pretext issue looms large here,” he said in a comment on Twitter.

He was referring to the problem of Trump resorting to declaring the border issue an emergency after spending two years in a losing political battle for wall funding.

Trump himself appeared to undermine his argument as he announced the emergency on Friday.

“I didn’t need to do this, but I’d rather do it much faster,” he said.

Land, military issues

Daskal expects border landowners also to sue to protect their property rights.

“A lot of the land that’s at issue is not federal land, it’s private land,” she said.

Chesney points to a challenge over the use of military funds. Defense Department rules say that, even if diverted, constructi­on funds must be for a project that “requires the use of the armed forces.”

The wall, however, has been cast from the outset as a civilian project.

“That is the main point of litigation vulnerabil­ity,” said Chesney.

 ?? AFP PHOTO/ BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI ??
AFP PHOTO/ BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI

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