Five takeaways from Trump's El Paso rally on border wall, shutdown talks

President Donald Trump held his first rally of
the year Monday, using the backdrop of El Paso, Texas, to make a case for his
controversial border wall and stepped up immigration enforcement.
Part 2020
messaging, part an effort to influence ongoing negotiations over government
funding, Trump blasted Democrats and touted his own successes over the past two
years. Prepare to hear these same themes a lot over the next two.
Here are
five key takeaways from Trump's rally in El Paso.
Border
security deal
Trump mostly
avoided the night’s breaking news – that budget negotiators in Congress had
reached a deal “in principle” to keep the government open past Friday, when
current funding will expire.
“They said
progress is being made," Trump said, referring to aides who briefed him
before he began speaking in El Paso, where signs hanging from the rafters read:
"Finish the wall."
"I
don’t want to hear about it," Trump said he told his aides, adding that he
chose to address the crowd rather than learn about details of the deal.
“We probably
have some good news,” he said. “But who knows.”
Trump gave
no indication of whether he’d be willing to sign such a deal.
Trump’s
rally remarks in El Paso, Texas, were frequently notable for what the president
didn’t say. After weeks of threatening to declare a national emergency as a way
of freeing up federal funding for his border wall, Trump never used the words
“national emergency” in a room full of supporters.
“Just so you
know, we’re building the wall anyway,” Trump said.
The absence
of a threat to go around Congress to find money for a wall unilaterally may
have been an oversight, but it also just as easily may have been by design.
White House aides have increasingly floated the idea in recent days of finding
money for the wall in the existing federal budget without declaring a national
emergency, which has faced resistance from some Senate Republicans.
Trump is
unlikely to find as much money through that route, and the approach will almost
certainly draw legal challenges whether he declares an emergency or not.
It’s 2018
all over again
Trump’s
appearance in El Paso marked his first rally this year – technically his first
campaign appearance of the 2020 presidential election cycle. But the vast
majority of Trump’s remarks were a rehash of the themes – and even the phrases
– he embraced during the midterm election.
The
president’s focus on the MS-13 gang, his claim that Democrats are “for open
borders,” his touting of the economy and low unemployment – all of those were
central to his 2018 stump speech. So, too, were his praise for legislation
allowing terminally-ill patients access to experimental drugs and the major
opioids package Congress approved last year.
Through the
midterms, Trump often mentioned the 2020 election and criticized individual
Democrats lining up to challenge him. The president mentioned only one
potential rival on Monday, Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke, who was holding a
competing rally in El Paso.
But 2020 is
around the corner
Though much
of Trump’s rally remarks could have been ripped from the midterms, he did
continue to sound some themes that are almost certain to be defining messages
for the next election. Among those: Abortion and socialism. The president hit
on both of those words in his State of the Union address last week, and White
House aides were pleased at the response those lines received from
conservatives.
"They’re
becoming the party of socialism, late-term abortions, open borders and
crime," Trump claimed.
Democrats
have, in fact, supported additional federal funding for border security, but
they oppose the border wall Trump proposed during his 2016 campaign. Trump’s
focus on “socialism” is based on more liberal Democratic presidential
candidates who have called for a Medicare-for-all health care system or
environmental proposals intended to lower carbon emissions.
Trump
specifically criticized the “Green New Deal,” saying that it sounds “like a
high school term paper that got a low mark.”
A
presidential pooch?
In one of
the more lighthearted moments of his remarks, Trump wondered what it would be
like if there was a presidential pooch beside him at the White House.
"A lot
of people say, 'Oh, you should get a dog,'" He said. "Why? 'It’s good
politically.' I said that's not the relationship I have with my people."
Trump said
he wouldn’t mind getting a dog, like many other presidents before him, but he
doesn’t have the time.
"How
would I look walking a dog on the White House lawn?" he asked, as the
crowd erupted into laughter.
"I
don’t know," he concluded. "It feels a little phony to me."
Trump is the
first president in more than 120 years who doesn’t have a canine pal by his
side at the White House, according to the Presidential Pet Museum website. The
last dog-less commander-in-chief was William McKinley, who had a parrot,
kittens and roosters – but no presidential pooch