WASHINGTON (AP) President Donald Trump issued the first veto of his presidency on Friday, overruling Congress to protect his emergency declaration for border wall funding.
Flanked by law enforcement officials as well as the parents of children killed by people in the country illegally, Trump maintained that he is not through fighting for his signature campaign promise, which stands largely unfulfilled 18 months before voters decide whether to grant him another term.
Congress has the freedom to pass this resolution, Trump said, and I have the duty to veto it.
A dozen defecting Republicans, including Jerry Moran of Kansas, joined Senate Democrats in approving the joint resolution on Thursday, which capped a week of confrontation with the White House as both parties in Congress strained to exert their power in new ways. It is unlikely that Congress will have the two-thirds majority required to override Trumps veto, though House Democrats have suggested they would try nonetheless.
Trump wants to use the emergency order to divert billions of federal dollars earmarked for defense spending toward the southern border wall. It still faces several legal challenges from Democratic state attorneys general and environmental groups who argue the emergency declaration was unconstitutional.
Those cases could block Trump from diverting extra money to barrier construction for months or longer. American Civil Liberties Union, which filed one of the cases, said the veto is meaningless, like the declaration in the first place.
Congress has rejected the presidents declaration, and now the courts will be the ultimate arbiter of its legality. We look forward to seeing him in court and to the shellacking that he will receive at the hands of an independent judiciary, said Executive Director Anthony Romero.
Trump maintained that the situation on the southern border is a tremendous national emergency, adding, our immigration system is stretched beyond the breaking point.
Two years into the Trump era, a dozen Republicans, pushed along by Democrats, showed a willingness to take the political risk of defecting. The 12 GOP senators, including the partys 2012 presidential nominee, Mitt Romney of Utah, joined the dissent over the emergency declaration order that would enable the president to seize for the wall billions of dollars Congress intended to be spent elsewhere.
The Senates waking up a little bit to our responsibilities, said Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., who said the chamber had become a little lazy as an equal branch of government. I think the value of these last few weeks is to remind the Senate of our constitutional place.
Many lawmakers said the vote was not necessarily a rejection of the president or the wall, but protections against future presidents namely a Democrat who might want to declare an emergency on climate change, gun control or any number of other issues.
Thursdays vote was the first direct challenge to the 1976 National Emergencies Act, just as a Wednesday vote on Yemen was the first time Congress invoked the decades-old War Powers Act to try to rein in a president. That resolution seeking to end U.S. backing for the Saudi Arabian-led coalition fighting in Yemen was approved in the aftermath of the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul and is expected to be the subject of Trumps second veto.
Despite the embarrassing defections, Trumps grip on the party remains strong and the White House made it clear that Republicans resisting Trump could face political consequences. Ahead of the voting, Trump framed the issue as with-him-or-against-him on border security, a powerful argument with many.
SPEAKING in the Oval Office, Trump painted his usual portrait of a lawless and violent border. He cited thousands and thousands of gang arrests and claimed many of the asylum seekers released into the U.S. were stone-cold killers, ignoring data that shows immigrants are less likely to commit crime. He noted, correctly, a spike in the number of people coming to the border to claim asylum.