Supreme court allows Trump to use $2.5bn in Pentagon funds for border wall

The US supreme court cleared the way for Donald Trump to use
billions in Pentagon funds to build a border wall.
The decision allows the Trump administration to redirect
approximately $2.5bn approved by Congress for the Pentagon to help build his
promised wall along the US-Mexico border even though lawmakers refused to
provide funding.
The Trump administration planned to use the $2.5bn on four
contracts to replace existing sections of barrier in Arizona, California and
New Mexico with more robust fencing.
The supreme court’s five conservative justices agreed to
block a ruling in lower courts that barred Trump from spending the money on the
wall contracts on the basis that Congress did not specifically authorize the
funds to be used that way. The court’s four liberal justices wouldn’t have
allowed construction to start.
The justices’ decision to lift the freeze on the money
allows Trump to make progress on a major 2016 campaign promise. Trump
celebrated the ruling on Twitter.
The lawsuit at the supreme court challenging the use of the
defense department funds was brought by the American Civil Liberties Union on
behalf of the Sierra Club and Southern Border Communities Coalition. The ACLU
had argued that the Trump administration “lacks authority to spend taxpayer
funds on a wall that Congress considered and denied”.
A trial court in Oakland, California, initially froze the
funds in May, and an appeals court kept the freeze in place earlier this month.
The case the supreme court ruled on began after the 35-day
partial government shutdown that started in December of last year. Trump ended
the shutdown in February after Congress gave him approximately $1.4bn in border
wall funding. But the amount was far less than the $5.7bn he was seeking, and
Trump then declared a national emergency to take cash from other government
accounts to use to construct sections of wall.
The money Trump identified includes $3.6bn from military
construction funds, $2.5bn in defense department money and $600m from the
Treasury department’s asset forfeiture fund.
The case before the supreme court involved just the $2.5bn
in defense department funds, which the administration says will be used to
construct more than 100 miles of fencing.
One project would replace 46 miles of barrier in New Mexico
for $789m. Another would replace 63 miles in Arizona for $646m. The other two
projects in California and Arizona are smaller.
The other funds were not at issue in the case.
The Treasury department funds have so far survived legal
challenges, and Customs and Border Protection has earmarked the money for work
in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley but has not yet awarded contracts. Transfer of the
$3.6bn in military construction funds is waiting on approval from the defense
secretary.