Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

How Trump order will fund wall

White House would pull money from other areas

- John Fritze and David Jackson

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump has declared a national emergency to pay for his long-promised and controvers­ial border wall.

The national emergency and other measures will free up $8 billion – far more than the $5.7 billion he initially demanded – to free up funding for 234 miles of bollard wall, the White House said. It’s a move that is almost guaranteed to draw the White House into a lengthy legal battle over the president’s ability to use the tool for that purpose.

So where will the White House find that money?

Military constructi­on

Trump will attempt to access $3.6 billion in military constructi­on money. Unlike other portions of the plan, the president must declare a national emergency to access this account, which has long been rumored to be under considerat­ion. The money is used for military bases and other projects. President George W. Bush tapped into this same account after he declared a national emergency following the 2001 terrorist attacks.

White House officials said they did not yet know which military constructi­ons might be cancelled or delayed by the move.

Trump will dip into about $600 million in asset forfeiture funds at Department of Treasury. This funding has been controvers­ial on both sides of the aisle because it comes from government seizures of property.

Drug interdicti­on

Current law gives the president power to rely on the Department of Defense for drug interdicti­on in certain cases, even without a national emergency. The law says the Pentagon can assist in that effort through the building of fences and other measures. The White House believes it can draw about $2.5 billion through this provision.

White House officials did not say, specifical­ly, where that money will come from.

Congressio­nal funding part of Trump’s package includes the $1.375 billion that Congress approved on a bipartisan basis for border barriers. That measure, which will also averted a government shutdown, limits Trump to spending the money only on previously approved barrier designs, including the “bollard wall” design that was also used by the Obama administra­tion.

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