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Trump will sign bill to avoid shutdown, then declare national emergency to free billions for border

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/02/14/politics/donald-trump-wall-funding-bill/index.html

Washington (CNN)President Donald Trump plans to sign a compromise border security measure Friday and then announce that he is using executive action, including declaring a national emergency, to spend $8 billion for border barriers, a White House official said.

The move will end, for now, a bitter standoff with Congress over his signature campaign promise. But it will likely spark a new constitutional dispute over whether the President is overstepping his authority.
The initial news of Trump's decision came via Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who said Trump would sign the bill to avoid a shutdown and then declare a national emergency at the same time.
The White House official says Trump is expected to announce that he will use executive action to draw on a variety of administration funding sources to help finance construction of his wall on the border. A national emergency declaration is expected to be one part of that.
The official confirmed the President is set to announce the total amount to be in the range of $8 billion. The official did not specify where all of that money would come from or whether the White House executive action would withstand a court challenge. Democrats are likely to take the matter to court.
A separate White House official said Trump will both sign the funding bill and the paperwork for his executive actions, including the national emergency, at a 10 a.m. Friday event in the White House Rose Garden. That White House official said the funding will break down as:

  • $1.375 billion from the Homeland Security appropriations bill. This money cannot be used to build a wall but can be used to build other types of border barriers due to the way the bill is written
  • $600 million from the Treasury Department's drug forfeiture fund, which would come from an executive action
  • $2.5 billion from the Defense Department's drug interdiction program, which would come from an executive action
  • $3.5 billion from the Defense Department's military construction budget, which would require a national emergency
ABC was first to report the funding breakdown.
The series of events was set in motion earlier Thursday in the Senate floor announcement from McConnell, who said he would drop his opposition to the national emergency move in order to advance the government funding measure.
Speaking on the Senate floor Thursday, McConnell sought to reassure lawmakers of the President's position before taking a vote on the plan, which falls short of providing the $5 billion in border wall funding Trump had demanded. Senators ultimately voted 82-16 to pass it.
"He has indicated he is prepared to sign the bill. He will also be issuing a national emergency declaration at the same time," the Kentucky Republican said.
His announcement came amid questions about the President's support for the deal, which was struck by a bipartisan panel of negotiators. Aides had said earlier Thursday that they were concerned Trump might reject the spending compromise -- a major shift from earlier this week, when officials indicated privately that he would.

In agreeing to the funding measure, Trump will accept far less than he wanted for the border barrier, a disappointment for a President who vowed both to build the wall and to bring a mastery of negotiation to the job.
Yet the end of one battle only seemed to be the beginning of another. Instead of haggling over government funding, the fight will turn to a debate over presidential power and possible executive overreach.
McConnell's abrupt announcement Thursday that Trump would sign the spending package -- ahead of any official word from the White House on the President's position -- came after a day of consternation among Republican lawmakers and administration officials about whether Trump would sign the bill.
With anxiety cresting, McConnell phoned the President to insist he sign the measure.
"We talked about the bill. I urged him to sign it. That was my focus," McConnell told reporters after the Senate passed the bill.
The President's only public message was a midday tweet indicating he was still mulling the final text of the bill with his team at the White House. Even after McConnell's announcement, the White House was scrambling to make Trump's intentions official.

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plans to sign a compromise border security measure Friday and then announce that he is using executive action, including declaring a national emergency, to spend $8 billion for border barriers, a White House official said.

The move will end, for now, a bitter standoff with Congress over his signature campaign promise. But it will likely spark a new constitutional dispute over whether the President is overstepping his authority.
The initial news of Trump's decision came via Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who said Trump would sign the bill to avoid a shutdown and then declare a national emergency at the same time.
The White House official says Trump is expected to announce that he will use executive action to draw on a variety of administration funding sources to help finance construction of his wall on the border. A national emergency declaration is expected to be one part of that.
The official confirmed the President is set to announce the total amount to be in the range of $8 billion. The official did not specify where all of that money would come from or whether the White House executive action would withstand a court challenge. Democrats are likely to take the matter to court.
A separate White House official said Trump will both sign the funding bill and the paperwork for his executive actions, including the national emergency, at a 10 a.m. Friday event in the White House Rose Garden. That White House official said the funding will break down as:
  • $1.375 billion from the Homeland Security appropriations bill. This money cannot be used to build a wall but can be used to build other types of border barriers due to the way the bill is written
  • $600 million from the Treasury Department's drug forfeiture fund, which would come from an executive action
  • $2.5 billion from the Defense Department's drug interdiction program, which would come from an executive action
  • $3.5 billion from the Defense Department's military construction budget, which would require a national emergency
ABC was first to report the funding breakdown.
The series of events was set in motion earlier Thursday in the Senate floor announcement from McConnell, who said he would drop his opposition to the national emergency move in order to advance the government funding measure.
Speaking on the Senate floor Thursday, McConnell sought to reassure lawmakers of the President's position before taking a vote on the plan, which falls short of providing the $5 billion in border wall funding Trump had demanded. Senators ultimately voted 82-16 to pass it.
"He has indicated he is prepared to sign the bill. He will also be issuing a national emergency declaration at the same time," the Kentucky Republican said.
His announcement came amid questions about the President's support for the deal, which was struck by a bipartisan panel of negotiators. Aides had said earlier Thursday that they were concerned Trump might reject the spending compromise -- a major shift from earlier this week, when officials indicated privately that he would.

Trump privately gripes that GOP was outplayed by Democrats
In agreeing to the funding measure, Trump will accept far less than he wanted for the border barrier, a disappointment for a President who vowed both to build the wall and to bring a mastery of negotiation to the job.
Yet the end of one battle only seemed to be the beginning of another. Instead of haggling over government funding, the fight will turn to a debate over presidential power and possible executive overreach.
McConnell's abrupt announcement Thursday that Trump would sign the spending package -- ahead of any official word from the White House on the President's position -- came after a day of consternation among Republican lawmakers and administration officials about whether Trump would sign the bill.
With anxiety cresting, McConnell phoned the President to insist he sign the measure.
"We talked about the bill. I urged him to sign it. That was my focus," McConnell told reporters after the Senate passed the bill.
The President's only public message was a midday tweet indicating he was still mulling the final text of the bill with his team at the White House. Even after McConnell's announcement, the White House was scrambling to make Trump's intentions official.
"President Trump will sign the government funding bill, and as he has stated before, he will also take other executive action -- including a national emergency -- to ensure we stop the national security and humanitarian crisis at the border," press secretary Sarah Sanders wrote in a statement 25 minutes after McConnell spoke. "The President is once again delivering on his promise to build the wall, protect the border, and secure our great country."

In the hours leading up to the vote, the President phoned GOP allies on Capitol Hill to ask their advice and vent at some of the bill's shortcomings, leading many to believe he was backing away from his earlier support of the legislation, according to people familiar with the calls. Trump told multiple allies he was considering not signing the bill.
White House aides spent all morning trying to digest the details of the 1,100-page bill and flag potential snags to the President and to Capitol Hill. In briefings about the bill, the President expressed concern that something might be found buried in the measure after he signed it, leading to embarrassment.
He huddled with his acting chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney, along with Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen and legislative affairs director Shahira Knight in the Oval Office on Thursday afternoon, as they intensely lobbied him to not back away from the bill.
Amid the wrangling, many of the President's senior advisers stressed he should sign the package to avoid another partial government shutdown, which they said would damage him politically. They said signing a national emergency declaration or some other type of executive action would blunt whatever blowback he received from conservatives.
It wasn't immediately clear which path Trump would choose to secure border wall funding through a national emergency declaration. White House aides have spent the past several weeks devising various options, which they believe could add up to billions in additional funding.
Options include diverting military funds meant for counter-narcotic programs, construction projects or disaster recovery. Not all steps under consideration would require declaring a national emergency, and some are considered more legally sound than others.

But many administration officials expect any unilateral action to secure the funding to be met with legal challenges, and McConnell had said previously he would oppose such a move, citing presidential overreach.
He dropped that opposition on Thursday after weeks of remaining staunch in his position, revealing just how worried he was over Trump's support.
"I've indicated to him that I'm going to support the national emergency declaration," McConnell said.
Reaction from Democratic congressional leaders was swift and negative. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said she was considering a legal challenge.
"I may," Pelosi said when asked about the prospect of challenging Trump in court. "That's an option and we will review our options."
"The President is doing an end run around Congress," the California Democrat added.

Before lawmakers were set to begin voting on the bill Thursday afternoon, many expressed hope -- even prayers -- the President would approve it.
"I pray" that Trump signs the bill, said Sen. Richard Shelby, an Alabama Republican who's the chairman of the Appropriations Committee. He said he had spoken with Trump on Wednesday night and the President was in "good spirits."
Earlier this week, Trump had signaled to advisers and allies he was inclined to sign the bipartisan deal to avoid another shutdown, and would use executive action to attempt to secure additional border wall dollars.
"I think the President's evaluating what's in the bill. He's also evaluating the authority he has, and I know he'll be making a decision before the deadline," Vice President Mike Pence, who is traveling in Warsaw, told reporters Thursday.

In conversations with allies over the past few days, Trump has griped that Republican negotiators were outplayed by their Democratic counterparts, securing a border funding number far smaller than he has spent the last two months demanding.
Privately, Trump has cast GOP's dealmaking efforts as inadequate and wondered why he, an experienced dealmaker, wasn't consulted at more regular intervals as the two sides haggled over an agreement. The White House acted largely on the sidelines while congressional negotiators struck a deal.
That was intentional, according to people familiar with the process, who noted that Trump's attempts at brokering an agreement between lawmakers had proved futile during the record-length government shutdown that ushered in the new year.
To appease the President, aides and some Republican lawmakers have cast the smaller figure, around $1.375 billion, as a down payment that will eventually lead to new wall construction.
Initially, Trump was distressed when he watched Sean Hannity and other Fox News hosts deride the plan, including as he watched recorded versions of prime-time programming during a late-night flight home on Monday from Texas, where he'd held a campaign rally.
After phone calls from the White House, some of the President's allies took a softer approach, saying the deal was palatable as long as Trump went ahead with unilateral action to secure some funding for the wall.
On Thursday, however, some of those voices returned to their initial skepticism.
"So the president has his hand forced to sign a 1,159 page bill that we KNOW is filled with amnesty, PORK and wiggle room? Total SCAM! @realDonaldTrump wasn't elected for this," Laura Ingraham wrote on Twitter. "This bill must NOT be signed by @realDonaldTrump."
 

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Good job Trump. Finally, he makes headway with his most important campaign promise of all. Now let's see if he can endure all the stupid lawsuits. This national emergency should have been declared last month ... but better late than never.
 
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Did anyone watch the actual press conference? It was glorious in every way possible.

Good job Trump. Finally, he makes headway with his most important campaign promise of all. Now let's see if he can endure all the stupid lawsuits. This national emergency should have been declared last month ... but better late than never.

I really hope this is an ironic post. Right?
 
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Did anyone watch the actual press conference? It was glorious in every way possible.



I really hope this is an ironic post. Right?

Hey I’m all for the wall. Don’t you guys have a boatpeople problem plus overcrowded detention centers? You know the drill.
 
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It's needed now. The US doesn't need all the criminal trash from Central America pouring in, after they have destroyed their countries.

Even people from other continents simply fly into Mexico and then head straight for the border. Name the country and somebody from it has been apprehended at the border (except for Canadians I guess).
 
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Even people from other continents simply fly into Mexico and then head straight for the border. Name the country and somebody from it has been apprehended at the border (except for Canadians I guess).

Yep that happens but the biggest issue now is the movement of people from Central and to a lesser extent South America.
 
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Yep that happens but the biggest issue now is the movement of people from Central and to a lesser extent South America.

There is a large drugs trafficking thing happening too. They seized a huge border smuggling shipment of fentanyl some weeks back (like millions of lives worth). Para-fentanyl is even worse (though this comes in mostly through seaports)

The wall (and commensurate layering of tech/existing interdiction) will pay itself off quite quickly (in money saved in the economy behind it)...in matter of months or even weeks actually.

Now let's see if he can endure all the stupid lawsuits.

Worth a read:

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/us-politics-2016-2020.374363/page-342#post-11171258

It shouldn't be too much of issue, it will likely go to SCOTUS like the travel ban in the end....and the statutes will prevail (regarding US president executive discretion). It is just a delay tactic by the dems....so as little of the wall is completed come 2020 elections. They think this will somehow help the swing vote areas that they lost to Trump (which I don't think it will given these people support a strong border largely, even if they disagree with Trump on other things)....when in reality at best it will just help their turnout in deep blue progressive states that they already got in the bag. Pelosi doing an about turn (after promising to put ZERO funding in for the wall in any bill and promising NEVER to negotiate with trump.....two promises she has now reneged on and Trump bypasses her on it ANYWAY lol)...will NOT have done the dems any favours.

Such facepalm by dems.....add to this the level of "all-in" they have gone with the Russian collusion narrative (that they themselves propped up by using foreign agent Christopher Steele and the dirty dossier and the FISA abuse). This year is going to be an interesting one.
 
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Did anyone watch the actual press conference? It was glorious in every way possible.



I really hope this is an ironic post. Right?
As much as I'd like it to be, it is not. Out of all the countries in the world, Mexico has dealt the most damage to the United States. When you have over 29 million illegal immigrants, a great majority of whom are illegal Hispanics (most from Mexico), something has to be done. As of now, I have not heard about any better alternative to the border problem than a wall. Even though illegal immigration on Southern border is going down, it is a tidal trend. If the Latin American economy becomes bad again, I can almost guarantee a new flood of illegal immigrants. Forget 8 billion dollars, 25 billion dollars is worth it to prevent such a catastrophe.
 
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so I guess with the appeal against emergency & decisions made by orange eventually make it to the supreme court as an appeal against from 2 lower court's decisions, we will finally have a wall.! All for it.
 
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