US shutdown: Trump renews national emergency threat over wall
US President Donald Trump has
renewed a threat to declare a national emergency to fund the
construction of a wall on the Mexican border.
A row with Democrats
over funding the wall has left the government partially shut down for
20 days, leaving some 800,000 federal employees unpaid.
On Saturday, the shutdown becomes the longest in US history.
Mr Trump says the wall, a key campaign pledge, is needed to tackle a security crisis of illegal immigration.
The Democrats say the wall is an “immorality” and a waste of taxpayers’ money.
President Trump has refused to sign legislation to fund and reopen
the government if it does not include $5.7bn (£4.5bn) for the wall.
What’s behind Mr Trump’s threat and what could happen?
He issued the threat on a visit on Thursday to a border patrol station in McAllen, in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas.
He said that if Congress did not approve funding for the wall, he would “probably… I would almost say definitely” declare a national emergency to bypass lawmakers.
Mr Trump would have the right to undertake such a construction
project in times of war and national emergency, usually allocating funds
from the department of defence.
But bypassing Congress would be hugely controversial, sparking allegations of the overuse of executive powers and it would almost certainly face huge legal challenges.
Some US media reports suggest the White House is considering
diverting some of the $13.9bn (£10.9bn) allocated last year by Congress
for disaster relief in such areas as Puerto Rico, Texas and California
to pay for the wall.
Analysts
say the national emergency move would provide political cover to reopen
government while allowing Mr Trump to argue he has done all he can to
fulfil his campaign promise.
The BBC’s David Willis in Washington
says that, with no further talks with the Democrats planned, this now
seems the most likely option for the president.
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, a key Trump ally, said there was no other pathway forward.
What did Mr Trump say at the border?
He was speaking at McAllen station, behind a display of weapons and cash said to have been seized by the border patrol.
He was joined by border patrol agents, and relatives of people killed by illegal immigrants.
“If we don’t have a barrier… you’re not going to be able to solve
this problem,” he said, adding that people faced “hard work”, “gruelling
problems” and “a lot of death” without it.
Mr Trump added: “They say a wall is medieval… There are some things that work.”
The president said in a national address on Tuesday the wall was needed to stem a “growing humanitarian and security crisis at our southern border”, involving “thousands of illegal immigrants”.
He pointed to illegal drug supplies, people trafficking and criminal acts by illegal immigrants in the US.
The
Democrats say the wall is “ineffective” and “unnecessary” and an
expensive bill to taxpayers that the president had said Mexico would
foot.
Has Trump changed his pledge on funding the wall?
Speaking on Thursday, Mr Trump said he never meant that Mexico would make a one-time payment for the wall.
“When I said Mexico would pay for the wall in front of thousands and thousands of people… obviously I never meant Mexico would write a cheque,” he said.
However, this is contradicted by an archived campaign memo
from 2016, where Mr Trump outlined how he planned to “compel Mexico to
make a one-time payment” of $5-10bn (£4bn-£8bn) for the wall.
Mr
Trump said on Thursday that, instead of a direct payment, Mexico would
be “paying for the wall indirectly, many, many times over”, under a new
trade deal between the US, Mexico and Canada.
Economists have
disputed this and critics say that any savings incurred due to the deal
would go directly to private businesses rather than flow into US
Treasury.
How is the shutdown progressing?
Partial shutdowns occur when Congress cannot agree a budget by a certain deadline or the president refuses to sign it.
This shutdown, which began on 22 December, has closed 25% of the government. Of the 800,000 federal employees affected, about 350,000 are furloughed – a kind of temporary lay off – and the rest are working without pay.
The first pay day since the shutdown falls on Friday and will pass
without workers getting salaries. They include prison guards, airport
security screening staff, and members of the FBI.
Some affected
federal workers who spoke to the BBC said they had resorted to a number
of measures, including taking other jobs, racking up credit card bills,
tapping into savings or taking on loans at high interest rates to pay
their bills.
Thousands have also applied for unemployment benefits.
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