Senate votes again to end Trump's border emergency declaration
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[September 26, 2019]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S.
Senate voted on Wednesday for a second time to end the national
emergency on the southern border the president declared in February, a
move Donald Trump would almost certainly veto if it reached his desk.
Trump, with his very first veto, struck down a similar measure that had
cleared both the House and Senate in March. Congress was unable to
muster the votes to override that veto.
The Senate vote to approve the resolution was 54-41.
Trump declared the emergency on the southern border to circumvent
Congress and take money already designated for other programs to pay for
his U.S.-Mexico border wall, which he promised to build during his 2016
campaign.
Democratic lawmakers said the move was an unconstitutional power grab
that undercut Congress' power of the purse, or the ability to tax and
spend public money for the national government.
Republicans insisted Trump had acted legally under a 1976 law known as
the National Emergencies Act, under which previous presidents had
declared dozens of emergencies.
The issue landed in the courts and Trump won an early battle in July
when the conservative-majority Supreme Court voted 5-4 to block a ruling
by a federal judge in California that barred the Republican president
from redirecting $2.5 billion in funds.
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President Donald Trump signs his veto of the congressional
resolution to end his emergency declaration to get funds for a
border wall during a ceremony in the Oval Office of the White House
in Washington, U.S., March 15, 2019. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Congress has refused to meet Trump's demands to fund a wall,
although it has provided some funds for border fencing and other
barriers.
This year, Trump sought $5.7 billion in wall funding. When Congress
refused, a standoff ensued that triggered a month-long partial
government shutdown that ended when the president agreed to $1.37
billion for border barriers, far less than he wanted.
Trump then declared the emergency, vowing to divert funds from other
accounts for the wall.
(Reporting by Tim Ahmann; Editing by Edmund Blair)
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