Daily Press (Sunday)

Trump vows to appeal ruling blocking key sections of wall

- By Daisy Nguyen and Elliot Spagat Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — A federal judge has blocked President Donald Trump from building key sections of his border wall with money secured under his declaratio­n of a national emergency, delivering what may prove a temporary setback on one of his highest priorities.

U.S. District Judge Haywood Gilliam Jr.’s order, issued Friday, prevents work from beginning on two of the highest-priority, Pentagon-funded wall projects — one spanning 46 miles in New Mexico and another covering 5 miles in Yuma, Arizona.

On Saturday, Trump pledged to file an expedited appeal of the ruling.

Trump, who is visiting Japan, tweeted: “Another activist Obama appointed judge has just ruled against us on a section of the Southern Wall that is already under constructi­on. This is a ruling against Border Security and in favor of crime, drugs and human traffickin­g. We are asking for an expedited appeal!”

While Gilliam’s order applied only to those first-inline projects, the judge felt the challenger­s were likely to prevail at trial on their argument that the president was wrongly ignoring Congress’ wishes by diverting Defense Department money.

“Congress’s ‘absolute’ control over federal expenditur­es — even when that control may frustrate the desires of the Executive Branch regarding initiative­s it views as important — is not a bug in our constituti­onal system. It is a feature of that system, and an essential one,” he wrote in his opinion.

It wasn’t a total defeat for the administra­tion. Gilliam, an Oakland-based appointee of President Barack Obama, rejected a request by California and 19 other states to prevent the diversion of hundreds of millions of dollars in Treasury asset forfeiture funds to wall constructi­on, in part because he felt they were unlikely to prevail on arguments that the administra­tion skirted environmen­tal impact reviews.

The delay may be temporary. The question for Gilliam was whether to allow constructi­on with Defense and Treasury funds while the lawsuits brought by the American Civil Liberties Union and the state attorneys general were being considered. The cases still must be heard on their merits.

“This order is a win for our system of checks and balances, the rule of law, and border communitie­s,” said Dror Ladin, an attorney for the ACLU, which represente­d the Sierra Club and the Southern Border Communitie­s Coalition.

The Justice Department did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The administra­tion faces lawsuits over the emergency declaratio­n but only one other seeks to block constructi­on during the legal challenge. A judge in Washington, D.C., last Thursday heard arguments on a challenge brought by the U.S. House of Representa­tives that says the money shifting violates the constituti­on. The judge was weighing whether the lawmakers even had the ability to sue the president instead of working through political routes to resolve the bitter dispute.

At stake is billions of dollars that would allow Trump to make progress on a signature campaign promise heading into his campaign for a second term.

Trump declared a national emergency in February after losing a fight with the Democratic-led House that led to a 35-day government shutdown.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States