California and 15 other US states sued President Donald Trump’s
administration Monday over his decision to declare a national emergency
to fund a wall on the southern border with Mexico, saying the move
violated the constitution.
Trump announced the emergency Friday in order to bypass Congress,
which approved only a quarter of the $5.6 billion he wanted for the wall
in a spending bill. But the lawsuit, filed in a federal court in
California, said the president’s order was contrary to the
constitution’s presentment and appropriations clauses, which outline
legislative procedures and define Congress as the final arbiter of
public funds, respectively.
The move had already been announced by Xavier Becerra, the attorney
general of California, who said Sunday his state and others had legal
standing because they risked losing moneys intended for military
projects, disaster assistance and other purposes. Critics, including
several senators from Trump’s Republican party, have warned that he has
opened the door for future presidents to call on the act whenever they
fail to get their way with Congress.
Should the states prevail, the case could work its way up to the
Supreme Court, setting up a precedent-setting showdown on the separation
of powers. Apart from California, other states seeking an injunction
are Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland,
Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon
and Virginia.
The states “bring this action to protect their residents, natural
resources, and economic interests from President Donald J. Trump’s
flagrant disregard of fundamental separation of powers principles
engrained in the United States Constitution,” the complaint said. It
added that Trump had veered the country toward a “constitutional crisis
of his own making.”
“Congress has repeatedly rebuffed the president’s insistence to fund a
border wall, recently resulting in a record 35-day partial government
shutdown over the border wall dispute,” it said.
“After the government reopened, Congress approved, and the president
signed into law, a $1.375 billion appropriation for fencing along the
southern border, but Congress made clear that funding could not be used
to build President Trump’s proposed border wall.”
The complaint also questioned Trump’s categorisation of illegal
border crossings as a national emergency, saying data issued by his own
administration refuted the notion. “Customs and Border Protection
(“CBP”) data show that unlawful entries are near 45-year lows,” it said.
“The State Department recognises there is a lack of credible evidence
that terrorists are using the southern border to enter the United
States. Federal data confirm that immigrants are less likely to commit
crimes than are native-born Americans.”
The White House says the emergency order empowers it to pull around
$6.6 billion from other sources, mostly already-allocated funds in the
Defense Department budget. But the lawsuit countered that tapping
military funds would result in huge losses for the states’ national
guard units which would otherwise use the money for domestic drug
interdiction and counter-drug activities as well as for law enforcement
programs.
The complaint added that the Department of Homeland Security had
violated the National Environmental Policy Act by failing to evaluate
the environmental impact of the wall in California and New Mexico,
saying species such as the endangered Mexican gray wolf, and the jaguar
would be at risk.
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