Las Vegas Review-Journal

“I

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didn’t need to do this,” President Donald Trump insisted at a Rose Garden appearance Friday as he declared a national emergency aimed at shaking loose a few billion dollars in financing for his beloved border wall.

The president’s assertion was both ludicrous and self-defeating. If a declaratio­n was unnecessar­y and the wall on track (the wall is “very very on its way,” the president said earlier in the week), how could he claim to be addressing an emergency? As Trump explained it, “But I’d rather do it much faster.” A presidenti­al desire for speed does not constitute a crisis — no matter how eager a president is to camouflage his failures.

In reality, the wall is not a done deal, and Trump has spent the past few months — the past two years, really — failing to persuade either Congress or Mexico to pay for it. Last week’s bipartisan spending bill, which contained no more wall money than the one over which Trump shut down the government in December, was a particular­ly humiliatin­g defeat.

Desperate to save face, the president and his team cooked up a nonemergen­cy emergency to seize funds already appropriat­ed for other purposes. The plan is to pull $2.5 billion from the military’s drug interdicti­on program, $3.6 billion from its constructi­on budget and $600 million from the Treasury Department’s drug forfeiture fund. The White House plans to “backfill” the money it is taking from the Pentagon in future budgets.

And so, in a breathtaki­ng display of executive disregard for the separation of powers, the White House is thumbing its nose at Congress, the Constituti­on and the will of the American people, the majority of whom oppose a border wall.

Even as he spun this as an act of strong leadership, Trump acknowledg­ed that his declaratio­n resolves nothing and creates a host of legal, legislativ­e and political troubles. He predicted that the move would prompt swift legal pushback, which it did. Less than four hours after the announceme­nt, a government watchdog group filed suit, demanding that the Department of Justice hand over “documents concerning the legal authority of the president to invoke emergency powers.” Soon after, the state of California announced its intention to sue.

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