Trump on brink of GOP rebellion over emergency declaration

President Trump is facing a potential revolt among Senate Republicans over his decision to declare a national emergency to construct the U.S.-Mexico border wall.

Sen. Rand Paul’s (R-Ky.) public announcement over the weekend that he will oppose Trump’s declaration ensures a resolution blocking it will be approved by the Senate after already passing the House — unless Senate Republicans can find some kind of last-minute way out of the showdown.

Republicans have been hunting for a way out of a fight over the declaration that has badly fractured the caucus, but Paul’s decision underscores the difficulty leadership faces in finding a successful exit strategy.

View the complete March 4 article by Jordain Carney on The Hill website here.

GOP bristles over plan to shift military funding to border wall

GOP concerns are bubbling up over the administration’s plans to divert billions in military construction money as part of President Trump‘s national emergency declaration.

As part of an effort to pull together roughly $8 billion for the U.S.-Mexico border wall, the administration will redirect $3.6 billion originally appropriated for military construction projects across the country.

Trump’s decision has sparked bipartisan backlash on Capitol Hill, where Republicans are openly concerned that the president is blurring the separation of powers and attempting to override Congress’s government funding decisions.

View the complete March 1 article by Jordain Carney on The Hill website here.

Congress Just Got A Lot Closer To Rejecting Trump’s National Emergency To Build A Wall

Credit: Susan Walsh, AP Photo

Congress may now have the votes needed to formally reject Trump’s plan. The White House has suggested the president will issue his first veto if it passes.

WASHINGTON — Sen. Lamar Alexander has come out against Trump’s state of emergency on the southern border, possibly becoming the crucial fourth Republican needed for Congress to formally rebuke the president.

Trump declared the state of emergency in order to divert billions of dollars toward building a border wall. If Alexander joins Republican Sens. Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, and Thom Tillis, there will be enough votes, including Democrats, to pass a resolution to end the state of emergency.

Alexander argued Thursday that the founders of the country rejected the concept of a king who can set taxes and spending on his own and said these powers must remain with Congress.

View the complete February 28 article by Paul McLeod and Lissandra Villa on the BuzzFeed website here.

Pentagon wants Congress to replenish funds Trump taps for border wall

Wasserman Schultz calls plan an end-run around Congress

The Pentagon every year comes to Congress to defend its ever-growing budget, highlighting the decrepit military installations and decades-old equipment that must be refurbished or replaced to defend the nation.

But now, Pentagon officials are telling lawmakers that diverting dollars from defense projects to build President Donald Trump’s desired border wall is justified and won’t weaken the military — so long as Congress replenishes the accounts Trump could tap to build the wall.

“Some current military construction projects may be deferred” if military construction money is used to pay for the wall, Robert H. McMahon, assistant secretary of Defense for sustainment, told the House Military Construction-VA Appropriations Subcommittee on Wednesday. “The fiscal year 2020 president’s budget request will include a request for funds to replenish funding for these projects.”

View the complete February 28 article by Patrick Kelley on The Roll Call website here.

GOP leader unsure on legality of Trump’s emergency declaration

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) says he has yet to determine whether President Trump’s emergency declaration to build border barriers is legal.

Asked for his legal opinion after meeting with a Department of Justice lawyer at a Tuesday luncheon of the GOP conference, McConnell said, “I haven’t reached a total conclusion.”

McConnell said while he graduated from law school, he’s not an expert on constitutional questions of separations of power.

View the complete February 26 article by Alexander Bolton on The Hill website here.

Republicans can’t claim to be the party of national security

The seal of the Central Intelligence Agency at CIA headquarters in Langley, Va., in April 2016. Credit: Carolyn Kaster, AP

An impressive list of 58 former national security officials — who served under both Republican and Democratic presidents — have released a declaration attacking the fiction that there is an “emergency” along the southern border, justifying President Trump’s power grab. Coming on the eve of Tuesday’s House vote on a resolution to short-circuit the declaration, it makes clear the degree to which Republican lawmakers will endanger national security to stay on Trump’s good side.

The officials state:

At the outset, there is no evidence of a sudden or emergency increase in the number of people seeking to cross the southern border. According to the administration’s own data, the numbers of apprehensions and undetected illegal border crossings at the southern border are near forty-year lows. Although there was a modest increase in apprehensions in 2018, that figure is in keeping with the number of apprehensions only two years earlier, and the overall trend indicates a dramatic decline over the last fifteen years in particular.

They also make clear, “There is no reason to believe that there is a terrorist or national security emergency at the southern border that could justify the President’s proclamation.”

View the complete commentary by Jennifer Rubin on The Washington Post website here.

Military Service Members and U.S. National Security Will Pay the Price for Trump’s Manufactured Emergency

Credit: Chip Somodevilla, Getty Images

After causing the longest partial government shutdown in U.S. history in a failed attempt to obtain nearly $6 billion in border wall funding, President Donald Trump now plans to defy the will of Congress by illegally siphoning billions of dollars from the nation’s defense budget. On February 15, Trump declared a national emergency at the U.S.-Mexico border in order to sidestep Congress and invoke unique executive authority. But during the announcement, Trump himself admitted that his decision was motivated more by convenience than necessity, outing the emergency declaration for what it really is: a rogue attempt to actualize an unfulfilled campaign promise.

Trump’s proposed border wall—which his own chief of staff referred to as “absurd and almost childish”—offers an ineffective solution to a nonexistent crisis. Apprehensions at the U.S.-Mexico border have decreased by nearly 75 percent since 2000, and those entering the United States are primarily children and families fleeing violence and seeking asylum. Despite Trump’s attempts to provoke fear about broader security concerns, his administration has found “no credible evidence” of terrorist groups entering the United States via the southern border. Moreover, U.S. law enforcement reports that only a small fraction of illegal drug seizures occur where the border wall would be constructed, as the vast majority of drugs enter the United States through ports of entry. The statute that the White House has cited in an attempt to co-opt billions in defense appropriations for this so-called national emergency requires funds be used in support of the military during a national emergency. In the absence of a legitimate crisis, however, the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) has asked border officials to justify the reallocation of funds. Continue reading “Military Service Members and U.S. National Security Will Pay the Price for Trump’s Manufactured Emergency”

House votes to overturn Trump’s emergency declaration

The House passed legislation Tuesday to block President Trump’s emergency declaration at the southern border, marking an unprecedented congressional challenge to a president’s authority to invoke emergency powers.

The resolution passed easily through the Democratic-controlled chamber, 245-182, with Democrats voting unanimously to send it to the Senate. The GOP-led upper chamber is expected to hold a vote on the measure in the coming weeks.

Republican leaders, who had clambered to limit defections in their ranks heading into Tuesday’s vote, were largely successful: 13 Republicans joined with Democrats to admonish Trump’s move — well short of the number Democrats would need to overturn the president’s promised veto.

View the complete February 26 article by Juliegrace Brufke on The Hill website here.

Breaking a trust to build the wall

CQ Budget Podcast, Episode 100

CQ’s award-winning defense reporter John M. Donnelly revealed that a Pentagon fund that President Donald Trump wants to use to pay for his wall is nearly depleted, forcing him to look elsewhere in the Pentagon budget for the money. Trump appears poised to break tradition and bypass Congress in this money transfer, and Donnelly says that “would tear a hole in the fabric of cooperation between the White House and the Congress.”

View the complete post with show notes on The Roll Call website here.

Former senior national security officials issue declaration on national emergency

President Trump on Feb. 22 said he would veto a House-introduced resolution to block his national emergency declaration. (Photo: Oliver Contreras/The Washington Post)

A bipartisan group of 58 former senior national security officials issued a statement Monday saying that “there is no factual basis” for President Trump’s proclamation of a national emergency to build a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border.

The joint statement, whose signatories include former secretary of state Madeleine Albright and former defense secretary Chuck Hagel, comes a day before the House is expected to vote on a resolution to block Trump’s Feb. 15 declaration.

The former officials’ statement, which will be entered into the Congressional Record, is intended to support lawsuits and other actions challenging the national emergency proclamation and to force the administration to set forth the legal and factual basis for it.

View the complete February 25 article by Ellen Nakashima on The Washington Post website here.