X

Trump Has No Way Out. A National Emergency To Build The Wall Will Likely Happen Soon

Trump wall ap-photo

President Trump wants the wall and the shutdown continues AP-PHOTOS

 

President Donald Trump has run out of options and that means in the coming days he will likely move forward to get his border wall the only way he can. Trump will now have to “national emergency” and raid government agencies to get the $5.7 billion wall, barrier, fence, whatever you want to call it to make sure he jeeps his biggest political promise.

At this point, it’s the 20th day of the Federal Government Shutdown, with political pressure on both President Trump and the Democrats have left little room for compromise. Moderate Senate Republicans are cracking and Democrats in both chambers are keeping the pressure on to reopen the government before any talks on border security begin.

Meanwhile, the Democratic-led Congress as passing spending bills that the just a couple of weeks ago was supported a bipartisan group of lawmakers. The Senate voted 98-0 to fund the government for two months while talks about the wall and border security continued, even the White House was on board but then President Trump heard from conservative voices from the media.

At that point Trump told Senate Majority lead Mitch McConnell that he was no longer backing the plan. Trump caused the shutdown, leaving Senate Republicans in a very uncomfortable position.

Now there is no other way that Trump gets his wall unless he calls for a State of Emergency and uses funds from the Defense Department and other agencies to get the money he needs to keep his campaign promise.

So how does Trump build the wall using the State of Emergency? Our partners at the Associated Press explains it all below.

The Trump administration is weighing using a national emergency declaration to circumvent Congress and the budget stalemate and force construction of the president’s long-promised southern border wall.

WHY AN EMERGENCY DECLARATION?

The administration has spent months trying to figure out how the president might be able to move forward with the wall — the central promise of his 2016 campaign — if Congress refuses to give him the money.

As early as last March, Trump was publicly floating the idea of using the military for the task. “Building a great Border Wall, with drugs (poison) and enemy combatants pouring into our Country, is all about National Defense. Build WALL through M!” he tweeted then.

But it’s Congress — not the president — that controls the country’s purse strings and must appropriate money he wants to spend.

Enter the emergency declaration, an option the White House counsel’s office is currently reviewing. Among the laws Trump could turn to is Section 2808 of the Title 10 U.S. Code pertaining to military construction.

According to the statute, if the president declares an emergency “that requires use of the armed forces,” the Defense secretary “may undertake military construction projects, and may authorize the Secretaries of the military departments to undertake military construction projects, not otherwise authorized by law that are necessary to support such use of the armed forces.”

Pentagon budget officials are analyzing the 2019 construction budget to determine how many unobligated dollars would be available to use for the wall if Trump settles on a declaration. Under the provision, only those construction budget funds that are not already obligated to other construction projects could be used for the wall.

There are more than 100 such provisions giving the president access to special powers in emergencies. And Congress has typically afforded the president broad authority to determine what constitutes an emergency and what does not, said Elizabeth Goitein, co-director of the liberty and national security program at the Brennan Center for Justice.

“Absolutely it’s an abuse of power for the president to declare a national emergency when none exists and to use it to try to get around the democratic process,” she said. “But we are in a situation where our legal system for emergency powers almost invites that kind of abuse.”

WHAT WOULD HAPPEN THEN?

Such a move is sure to spark a flood of legal challenges questioning the president’s authority as well as whether the situation at the border really constitutes an emergency. Trump has been trying to press that case in recent days, insisting the situation qualifies as a security and humanitarian “crisis.”

He’ll also run into other questions.

“The problem for the Trump administration is that border security is fundamentally a law enforcement issue that does not require the use of the military,” said Todd Harrison, a defense budget expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, via email. “So I think they would be on shaky legal ground trying to use emergency authorities this way, and it is almost certain that they would end up in court.”

Sen. Jack Reed, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said it would be inappropriate for Trump to use Section 2808.

“We are not at war with Mexico, and the proposed border wall has no core (Defense Department) function. Indeed, the Pentagon’s most recent National Defense Strategy doesn’t mention the southern border as a national defense priority,” said Reed, D-R.I.

House Armed Services Committee Chairman Adam Smith, speaking on CNN, said that even if Trump could declare an emergency, it would be a “huge mistake.”

“There clearly is no national emergency. But they asked me, ‘Can he do it?’ Yeah he can. It would be wrong, it would be horrible policy and I’m totally and completely against it. But from a legal standpoint he can do it,” said Smith, D-Wash.

He and others agreed that any declaration would surely be challenged in court.

So, Will he do it?

News Talk Florida: News Talk Florida Staff
Related Post