The Mercury News

Democrats will try to block Trump’s border wall maneuver

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON » Senate Democrats are moving on two fronts to block President Donald Trump from using special emergency powers to transfer money from military base constructi­on projects like new schools to pay for new fences along the U.S.Mexico border.

First, Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer of New York announced Tuesday that he will force a vote to reject the plan, saying the vote would give lawmakers a chance to block Trump “from stealing military funding from their states to foot the bill for an expensive and ineffectiv­e wall he promised Mexico would pay for.”

A similar measure passed this spring with 12 Senate Republican votes but was vetoed by Trump. The rules allow Schumer to retry every few months and don’t allow Republican­s to block the vote.

Perhaps more ominously for Trump is a potential vote on Thursday in the powerful Appropriat­ions panel, where several members agree with Democrats that Trump is oversteppi­ng by reordering spending decisions by Congress to fund wall projects that have otherwise been rejected.

A top Appropriat­ions Democrat, Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, said he will move to amend a $694 billion Pentagon funding bill to block Trump from diverting money intended for military projects to the wall.

The Pentagon last week identified $3.6 billion worth of military constructi­on projects it’s willing to kill to build 175 miles of border wall. The projects included a $63 million middle school in GOP Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s state of Kentucky though most of them are located outside the continenta­l U.S.

“The cancellati­on of these projects is based on a national emergency declared by the president that was rejected on its face by both house of Congress on bipartisan votes,” Durbin said. “Congress cannot and should not be silent when the power of the purse is undermined in this way. Why are we here?”

Durbin would prevail in the vote if panel Republican­s like Roy Blunt of Missouri and Susan Collins of Maine vote like they did in March — a developmen­t that would embarrass top Republican­s like McConnell and Appropriat­ions Committee Chairman Richard Shelby.

McConnell said Durbin’s move, along with an abortion-related vote promised by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., on a separate health spending bill, amount to “poison pills” that violate the recent budget pact.

“I can’t overstate how difficult it was, given the players involved, to reach an agreement,” McConnell said. “And here, when we begin to take the first step in our committee process here, our Democratic friends ... are trying to wiggle out of the agreement we all signed off on and voted for. So I think it is truly a disturbing developmen­t.”

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Senate Minority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, left, speaks at a news conference following a Senate policy luncheon Tuesday on Capitol Hill in Washington.
ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Senate Minority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, left, speaks at a news conference following a Senate policy luncheon Tuesday on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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