Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump backs off emergency call

- By Eli Stokols and Noah Bierman

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Monday seemed to back away from his threat to declare a national emergency to fund his proposed southern border wall and perhaps resolve the 24-day-old partial government shutdown, demanding instead that Democrats give him the $5.7 billion he wants.

“I’m not looking to call a national emergency,” Trump told reporters on the White House South Lawn. “This is so simple, you shouldn’t have to.”

The president again insisted that he has “the absolute right” to use an emergency declaratio­n to bypass Congress and redirect money in military accounts toward a wall, as conservati­ve media pundits and some far-right Republican­s have urged.

“But I’m not looking to do that,” he said.

Many Republican­s in Congress have expressed opposition to an emergency declaratio­n as an unwarrante­d exercise of presidenti­al power, despite their eagerness to end what is now the longest shutdown in history as polls show significan­tly more Americans blame them and Trump than Democrats.

Democrats, Trump said, “should agree on border security” and end the stalemate. “We should get on with our lives.”

Speaking as he departed for New Orleans, where he addressed a convention of farmers, Trump claimed of Democrats that “many of them are calling and saying, ‘We agree with you,’ “although he offered no names. He added “Many of them are calling and many of them are breaking. The Republican­s are rock solid.”

In reality, the Democrats have stood firm behind their leaders, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California and Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer of New York. Republican­s, however, are showing splits.

Some politicall­y vulnerable Senate Republican­s have stated publicly that they would prefer to end the shutdown and fight separately for additional border security funding, including a wall. But hard-line conservati­ves tell the president that would be tantamount to accepting defeat and would disappoint his supporters.

Trump said he rejected a proposal by Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., for lawmakers to approve a short-term funding bill that would temporaril­y reopen government and allow lawmakers a few weeks to negotiate without the disruption that has left about 800,000 federal employees unpaid and has shut down or reduced a variety of essential services.

Reiteratin­g the arguments he made last week, including in a prime-time Oval Office speech to the nation and a visit to the U.S.-Mexico border, Trump repeated his claims of a crisis there that demands a sweeping federal response — claims that, thus far, have little moved public opinion or persuaded Democrats to negotiate.

“We have a very big crisis on the border, a humanitari­an crisis,” Trump told reporters.

When he speaks of a humanitari­an crisis, he refers to victims of crime by migrants arriving illegally — though government data show U.S. residents commit crime at much higher rates — and not to the wave of families and individual­s detained in makeshift centers seeking asylum over his objections. He also describes women and children among the migrants as being exploited by human trafficker­s.

In New Orleans, Trump devoted a large portion of his speech at the annual convention of the American Farm Bureau Federation to his fight over the border wall and immigratio­n. He called a rancher, Jim Chilton of Arizona, to the stage to help make the case for a wall — “Mr. President, we need a wall,” he said — and urged the audience to call Democratic members of Congress to demand it.

Despite the applause for a wall among the assembled farmers, nonpartisa­n polls show that most Americans blame the president and his party for the unpopular shutdown and a majority opposes the wall, although support has ticked up over the last year.

“When it comes to keeping the American people safe, I will never, ever back down,” Trump said. As he typically does, he made false or misleading claims that cast migrants collective­ly as terrorists, drug trafficker­s and others who are “not the people we want.”

“I didn’t need this fight,” he said, insisting that Democrats are forcing it because they believe it will help them win the White House in 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States