Thứ Ba, 19 tháng 2, 2019

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California AG Xavier Becerra says states to sue over Trumps national emergency declaration Politi

The group of states, led by California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, filed the lawsuit in the US District Court for the Northern District of California.

"Were going to try to halt the President from violating the Constitution, the separation of powers, from stealing money from Americans and states that has been allocated by Congress, lawfully," Becerra told CNNs Kate Bolduan Monday.

The attorneys general from Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon and Virginia joined California in the lawsuit.

Its the latest challenge to hit the Trump administration, which already faces a litany of lawsuits over the national emergency declaration. Over the weekend, the Center for Biological Diversity, Border Network for Human Rights, which marched with Beto ORourke in El Paso, Texas, last week, and the American Civil Liberties Union all announced lawsuits.

At the core of each lawsuit is the argument that Trump is circumventing Congress to fund the wall along the US Mexico border by declaring an emergency.

"The Constitution assigns Congress the power of the purse, and no prior president has ever tried to use emergency powers to fund a chosen project particularly a permanent, large scale domestic project such as this against congressional will. This is obviously improper," said Dror Ladin, staff attorney with the ACLUs National Security Project.

Becerra argued that the states have standing to challenge Trump because money appropriated to them might be at risk.

"If the President is essentially stealing money thats been allocated to go to the various states for various purposes but no longer will, were being harmed, our people are being harmed," he said.

The wave of lawsuits was expected, though fighting them in court will likely be difficult.

The National Emergencies Act allows the President to declare a national emergency and unlock a stash of funds by invoking certain statutory authority. The President has wide discretion over what constitutes a national emergency. As a result, legal experts argue that fighting the declaration on the basis of the emergency itself will likely be difficult. The other question is whether the statute Trump has invoked which in this case, requires the use of the armed forces can be used to fund the wall.

Under the declaration, the administration will tap dollar 2.5 billion of military narcotics funding and dollar 3.6 billion in military construction funding. Acting US Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan said and determine whether border barriers are necessary to support the use of the armed forces.

Its not just lawsuits that the administration has to face, but also the possibility of a joint resolution put forth by House Democrats to terminate the declaration. The resolution would need to be voted on by the House and then the Senate, before heading to the Presidents desk.

On Sunday, White House adviser Stephen Miller indicated that Trump would cast the first veto of his presidency if lawmakers tried to terminate the declaration.

National emergencies can last for one year and then terminate, unless the President renews the declaration 90 days prior, said Robert Chesney, who served in the Justice Department and teaches at the University of Texas at Austin School of Law. Every six months, Congress can consider whether to put forward a joint resolution to terminate the emergency.

According to , there have been 58 national emergencies between 1978 and 2018. Of those, 31 are still in effect today.

For more infomation >> California AG Xavier Becerra says states to sue over Trumps national emergency declaration Politi - Duration: 2:44.

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16 States Sue to Stop Trumps Use of Emergency Powers to Build Border Wall The New York Times - Duration: 8:14.

16 States Sue to Stop Trumps Use of Emergency Powers to Build Border Wall The New York Times

By and

WASHINGTON — A coalition of 16 states, including California and New York, on Monday challenged President Trump in court over his plan to use emergency powers to spend billions of dollars on his border wall.

The lawsuit is part of a constitutional confrontation that Mr. Trump set off on Friday when he declared that he would spend billions of dollars more on border barriers than Congress had granted him. The clash raises questions over congressional control of spending, the scope of emergency powers granted to the president, and how far the courts are willing to go to settle such a dispute.

The suit, filed in Federal District Court in San Francisco, argues that the president does not have the power to divert funds for constructing a wall along the Mexican border because it is Congress that controls spending.

Xavier Becerra, the attorney general of California, said in an interview that the president himself had undercut his argument that there was an emergency on the border.

Probably the best evidence is the presidents own words, he said, referring to : I didnt need to do this, but Id rather do it much faster.

The lawsuit, California et al. v. Trump et al., says that the plaintiff states are going to court to protect their residents, natural resources and economic interests. Contrary to the will of Congress, the president has used the pretext of a manufactured crisis of unlawful immigration to declare a national emergency and redirect federal dollars appropriated for drug interdiction, military construction and law enforcement initiatives toward building a wall on the United States Mexico border, the lawsuit says.

Heres how President Trumps border wall fits on the list of emergency declarations.

to challenge the presidents declaration. The Democrat controlled House of Representatives may take a two prong approach when it returns from a recess. One would be to bring a lawsuit of its own.

Lawmakers could also vote to override the declaration that an emergency exists, but it is doubtful that Congress has the votes to override Mr. Trumps certain veto, leaving the courts a more likely venue.

Joining California and New York are Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon and Virginia. All have Democratic governors but one — Maryland, whose attorney general is a Democrat — and most have legislatures controlled by Democrats.

The dispute stems from steps Mr. Trump said he would take after lawmakers granted him only dollar 1.375 billion for new border barriers, legislation he signed last week to avoid another government shutdown.

Mr. Trump asserted the power to tap three additional pots of money on his own: dollar 600 million from a Treasury Department asset forfeiture fund for law enforcement priorities; about dollar 2.5 billion from a military antidrug account, most of which would first be siphoned from other military programs the Pentagon has yet to identify; and dollar 3.6 billion in military construction funds he said he could redirect by invoking an emergency powers statute.

Presidents have invoked emergency powers statutes nearly five dozen times since Congress enacted the National Emergencies Act of 1976, but never before has one been used to make an end run around Congress after it rejected funding for a particular policy.

But as the debate over Mr. Trumps action shifts to courtrooms, legal experts warned that its fate may turn less on such high constitutional principle and more on complex legal issues — from whether plaintiffs can establish that the case is properly before the courts, to how to interpret several statutes.

Even though Trumps political maneuver to get around an uncooperative Congress looks like it stretches the Constitution, the questions presented in court will raise ordinary and complicated issues of administrative law, said Peter M. Shane, an Ohio State University law professor and co author of .

Two cases had already been filed after Mr. Trumps announcement on Feb. 15 — one , representing several Texas landowners and a Texas environmental group, and the other by the Center for Biological Diversity, Defenders of Wildlife and the Animal Legal Defense Fund.

At least two other lawsuits are expected to be filed later this week. The American Civil Liberties Union has announced its intention to file a case, but has not yet publicly identified its client. The other case will be brought by Protect Democracy, another watchdog group, and the Niskanen Center, a center right policy institute, on behalf of El Paso County and the Border Network for Human Rights.

Many critics have challenged whether an emergency truly exists on the Southern border that a wall would solve, pointing to government data showing that the number of people crossing illegally has dropped significantly over the past generation and that most drugs are smuggled through ports of entry.

The president has argued, without proof, that the emergency declaration is warranted because the migrants invading the United States across the Mexico border have caused epidemics of crime and drug use.

Legal specialists expected the Justice Department to urge a court not to consider facts about the border or Mr. Trumps words, but rather to defer to the presidents decision. The courts have a long history of being reluctant to substitute their own judgment for the presidents about a security threat.

The Trump administration will have a powerful argument to invoke: In the National Emergencies Act, Congress defined no standard for what conditions have to be met before a president may determine that a qualifying crisis exists.

But before a judge could weigh whether Mr. Trump invoked the statute legitimately, he or she would have to decide whether the dispute is properly before the court in the first place.

Plaintiffs will need to establish standing by showing that they are suffering some particular injury from what Mr. Trump is doing. Several of the lawsuits involve people who own land or represent communities along the Mexican border in Texas, where Mr. Trump has put the focus of his emphasis on the need for more barriers.

But it is not clear whether any of the fencing will be built in California or New Mexico, two of the states in the lawsuit, and it certainly will not be built in other states involved in the litigation, like New York, New Jersey or Hawaii.

Mr. Becerra, Californias attorney general, suggested that plaintiffs in the states lawsuits have standing for reasons that are unrelated to whether any portions of Mr. Trumps wall will be built in their territory, arguing that the presidents unconstitutional action could cause harms in many parts of the country.

People in California and other plaintiff states could lose funding that they paid for with their tax dollars, money that was destined for drug interdiction or for the Department of Defense for military men and women and military installations, he said in the interview.

Further complicating matters, the administration has said it intends to spend the funds in sequence, starting with the dollar 1.375 billion Congress appropriated, and reaching the emergency power military construction fund last. The Justice Department is likely to argue that if no disputed spending is imminent, the case is not ripe for litigation and should be dismissed.

Ian Bassin, the executive director of Protect Democracy, said that El Paso County would probably argue that its economy was being harmed by Mr. Trumps emergency declaration because it wrongfully signaled to businesses and potential tourists that they should stay away.

The Justice Department declined to comment on the wave of lawsuits. Mr. Trump has said he expected to be sued and to lose in lower courts, but he predicted he would eventually prevail before the Supreme Court.

But plaintiffs can also challenge whether the administration is interpreting several statutes correctly.

The that gives the secretary of defense authority to transfer some Pentagon money into the antidrug account Mr. Trump is then planning to tap, for example, says its authority may be used in no case where the item for which funds are requested has been denied by the Congress — raising the question of whether extra funding for border barriers counts as such a forbidden item.

And the Mr. Trump plans to use permits military construction spending in an emergency that requires the use of the armed forces for projects to support such use. That has been used before to build up foreign military bases in a war effort, but litigants challenge whether a permanent wall to help civilian agencies police the border qualifies under that wording.

Judges will certainly be aware of the larger institutional context when they address those technical issues, but that awareness will not, by itself, determine how the legal questions get resolved, Mr. Shane said.

An earlier version of this article misidentified one of the states involved in the litigation. Washington State is not a party to the suit.

For more infomation >> 16 States Sue to Stop Trumps Use of Emergency Powers to Build Border Wall The New York Times - Duration: 8:14.

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Breaking Celeb News | 16 states sue Trump over emergency order to fund border wall - Duration: 1:56.

For more infomation >> Breaking Celeb News | 16 states sue Trump over emergency order to fund border wall - Duration: 1:56.

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GAO: Unclaimed Retirement Savings Transferred to States - Duration: 1:17.

For more infomation >> GAO: Unclaimed Retirement Savings Transferred to States - Duration: 1:17.

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U.S. states sue Trump administration in showdown over... - Duration: 3:12.

Acoalition of 16 U.S.states led by California sued President Donald Trump's administration on Monday over his decision to declare a national emergency to obtain funds for building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.The lawsuit filed in U.S.District Court for the Northern District of California came just days after Trump invoked emergency powers on Friday after Congress declined to fulfill his request for $5.7billion to help build the wall that was his signature 2016 campaign promise.His move aims to let him spend money appropriated by Congress for other purposes

Joining in filing the lawsuit are the attorneys general of Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Virginia

'Today, on Presidents Day, we take President Trump to court to block his misuse of presidential power,' California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said in a statement

'We´re suing President Trump to stop him from unilaterally robbing taxpayer funds lawfully set aside by Congress for the people of our states

For most of us, the Office of the Presidency is not a place for theatre,' added Becerra, a Democrat

Three Texas landowners and an environmental group filed the first lawsuit against Trump's move on Friday, saying it violates the Constitution and would infringe on their property rights

The legal challenges could slow down Trump's efforts to build the wall, which he says is needed to check illegal immigration and drug trafficking, but will likely end up at the conservative-leaning U.S.Supreme Court.In a budget deal passed by Congress to avert a second government shutdown, nearly $1.4billion was allocated toward border fencing.Trump's emergency order would give him an additional $6.7billion beyond what lawmakers authorized.In television interviews on Sunday and Monday, Becerra said the lawsuit would use Trump's own words against him as evidence there is no national emergency to declare

Earlier, Trump had said he knew that he did not need to declare an emergency to build the wall, a comment that could now undercut the government's legal argument

'Presidents don't go in and claim declarations of emergency for the purposes of raiding accounts because they weren't able to get Congress to fund items,' Becerra said on MSNBC

The legal challenges could slow down Trump's efforts to build the wall, which he says is needed to check illegal immigration and drug trafficking, but will likely end up at the conservative-leaning U.S.Supreme Court.A woman from Honduras is seen running from tear gas with her two children after trying to breach the border

For more infomation >> U.S. states sue Trump administration in showdown over... - Duration: 3:12.

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Google Pay picks up the pace, adds more than 40 banks in the United States - Duration: 2:12.

When it comes to mobile payment services, Apple and Google compete against each other in the United States, as both giants are trying to amass as many customers as possible

In fact, Apple Pay and Google Pay add new banks and financial institutions on a monthly basis, but the numbers vary greatly

For example, early this month, Apple Pay support was added for 15 new banks, far from what Google Pay managed to add this month

The updated list of banks and credit unions in the U.S. that offer Google Pay support has been recently updated with 43 new banks

Alpena Community Credit Union, American Bank, NA, Bank of Deerfield, Bar Harbor Bank & Trust, Baraboo State Bank, BlackRidgeBank, Campbell Employees Federal Credit Union, Coleman County State Bank, Columbia Credit Union, Community Bank of Louisiana, Community Resource Bank, Equishare Credit Union, Federation Bank, First Area Credit Union, FNB Bank, Inc

(KY), FNB Bank, Inc. (WV), GNB Bank, Jefferson Credit Union, KH Network Credit Union, LaSalle State Bank, Liberty Bank, Members Choice West Virginia Federal Credit Union, and Memphis City Employees, Metro Employees Credit Union, Midland States Bank, Monroe Telco Federal Credit Union, NESC Federal Credit Union, NexTier Bank, National Association, Northwestern Mutual Credit Union, Pearl Hawaii Federal Credit Union, Pine Federal Credit Union, Rabobank, NA, Rushville State Bank, Sanibel Captiva Community Bank, Southwest National Bank, St

Pius X Church Federal Credit, The Citizens National Bank of Bluffton, The Citizens National Bank of Somerset, The Farmers & Merchants Bank, The First National Bank of Ballinger, Ticonderoga Federal Credit Union, Washington Gas Light Federal Credit Union, Windsor Federal Savings & Loan, and Wiremen's Credit Union

If you want to use Google Pay, but your bank is not among those that offer support for the mobile payment service, you can be sure that Google will eventually add it at some point in the future

Be sure to check back next month when Google Pay is expected to add new banks and credit unions

For more infomation >> Google Pay picks up the pace, adds more than 40 banks in the United States - Duration: 2:12.

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U.S. states sue Trump administration in showdown over... Daily Mail Online - Duration: 4:34.

U.S. states sue Trump administration in showdown over... Daily Mail Online

A coalition of 16 U.S. states led by California sued President Donald Trumps administration on Monday over his decision to declare a national emergency to obtain funds for building a wall along the U.S. Mexico border.

The lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California came just days after Trump invoked emergency powers on Friday after Congress declined to fulfill his request for dollar 5.7 billion to help build the wall that was his signature 2016 campaign promise.

His move aims to let him spend money appropriated by Congress for other purposes.

Joining in filing the lawsuit are the attorneys general of Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Virginia. 

Today, on Presidents Day, we take President Trump to court to block his misuse of presidential power, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said in a statement. 

A coalition of 16 U.S. states led by California sued President Donald Trumps administration on Monday over his decision to declare a national emergency to obtain funds for building a wall along the U.S. Mexico border. He is pictured at the Rose Garden during Fridays announcement

We´re suing President Trump to stop him from unilaterally robbing taxpayer funds lawfully set aside by Congress for the people of our states. For most of us, the Office of the Presidency is not a place for theatre, added Becerra, a Democrat.

Three Texas landowners and an environmental group filed the first lawsuit against Trumps move on Friday, saying it violates the Constitution and would infringe on their property rights.

The legal challenges could slow down Trumps efforts to build the wall, which he says is needed to check illegal immigration and drug trafficking, but will likely end up at the conservative leaning U.S. Supreme Court.

In a budget deal passed by Congress to avert a second government shutdown, nearly dollar 1.4 billion was allocated toward border fencing. 

Trumps emergency order would give him an additional dollar 6.7 billion beyond what lawmakers authorized.

In television interviews on Sunday and Monday, Becerra said the lawsuit would use Trumps own words against him as evidence there is no national emergency to declare.

Earlier, Trump had said he knew that he did not need to declare an emergency to build the wall, a comment that could now undercut the governments legal argument.

Presidents dont go in and claim declarations of emergency for the purposes of raiding accounts because they werent able to get Congress to fund items, Becerra said on MSNBC.

The legal challenges could slow down Trumps efforts to build the wall, which he says is needed to check illegal immigration and drug trafficking, but will likely end up at the conservative leaning U.S. Supreme Court. A woman from Honduras is seen running from tear gas with her two children after trying to breach the border 

Earlier, Trump had said he knew that he did not need to declare an emergency to build the wall, a comment that could now undercut the governments legal argument. A section of the wall is seen being put in place in El Paso, Texas, in January 

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For more infomation >> U.S. states sue Trump administration in showdown over... Daily Mail Online - Duration: 4:34.

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16 states sue the Trump administration over national emergency declaration - Duration: 5:35.

Sixteen states, including California, New York, and Michigan, are suing over Trump's decision to declare a national emergency to obtain funding for a border wall

The suit against the Trump administration is the latest one the White House faces over the president's announcement

The ACLU as well as the nonpartisan nonprofit Protect Democracy have also said they'll pursue lawsuits against the Trump administration

The states' lawsuit, much like the others, argues that the Trump administration is bypassing Congress's constitutional authority over federal funding and hurting states in the process

"If the President is essentially stealing money that's been allocated to go to the various states for various purposes but no longer will, we're being harmed, our people are being harmed," California Attorney General Xavier Becerra told CNN on Monday

Both Congressional Democrats and Republicans have expressed concerns that Trump's decision to use a national emergency to tap into different pots of funding, including money authorized for counternarcotics programs and military construction, marks an unprecedented expansion of executive power

What's been especially unique about Trump's declaration is that he's doing so to obtain funds for a wall after Congress explicitly declined to fund it

Since Congress is given the ability to allocate federal funds by the Constitution, many lawmakers have argued Trump's emergency declaration is a unilateral means of getting around the legislature

"The separation of powers is being violated, we're going to go out there and make sure that Donald Trump cannot steal money from the states and people who need them, since we paid the taxpayer dollars to Washington, D

C. to get those services," Becerra emphasized in an MSNBC interview. There will be lots of challenges to Trump's declaration It's unclear whether the states or activist groups have a firm enough legal footing to win their respective legal challenges against Trump

But it's certain that there will be many lawsuits filed over the emergency declaration

Although Trump has by his own admission suggested that he didn't "need to" declare this emergency, the National Emergencies Act itself gives presidents a wide berth to take advantage of it, making it tougher to field an effective challenge

Additionally, congressional Democrats are weighing a couple different ways to push back on the emergency declaration, including the use of a resolution that would terminate it

As established by the National Emergencies Act, Congress has the ability to terminate the declaration if both chambers decide to do so via a simple majority

Because Trump is expected to veto a resolution like this if it passes, Democrats would need a number of Republicans to join them to make up a two-thirds veto-proof majority in the House and the Senate

Given Republicans' aversion to explicitly confronting Trump, it's unlikely they'll be able to reach that threshold

Landowners along the southern border who could see their land seized for wall construction via "eminent domain," would also likely have standing to sue to prevent this seizure

This is far from the first time various states have tried to take on Trump. As the Los Angeles Times reports, California alone has already sued the Trump administration at least 38 times including over the constitutionality of the travel ban

For more infomation >> 16 states sue the Trump administration over national emergency declaration - Duration: 5:35.

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16 states file lawsuit challenging President Trump's emergency declaration - Duration: 0:57.

For more infomation >> 16 states file lawsuit challenging President Trump's emergency declaration - Duration: 0:57.

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Trump unleashes as 16 states sue him over border wall emergency declaration - Duration: 5:02.

 The President was particularly scathing about California's lead role in the legal challenge, claiming the state had "wasted billions of dollars on their out of control Fast Train", a project recently scaled back after costs ballooned to $US77 billion

 He also noted that he had predicted last week that the action would be brought in the federal judiciary's 9th Circuit, which has a history of ruling against the administration Mr Trump intends to divert $US8 billion from counter-drug and military funds to build his US-Mexico border wall, after Congress refused to agree to more than $US1

4 billion.  Presidents have declared national emergencies before, but never to get the money they want after Congress refused

 The lawsuit will argue that the move is unconstitutional, and are seeking a preliminary injunction to stop Mr Trump from acting until the case is resolved

They may challenge his grounds for calling an emergency based on his own words, after he told reporters just before signing the declaration: "I could do the wall over a longer period of time

I didn't need to do this, but I'd rather do it much faster." The White House argued Mr Trump only meant he was "not going to ignore the border emergency"

 The 16 states all have Democratic governors, except for Maryland, whose Democratic Attorney-General is named in the action

The others are Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon and Virginia

 The complaint was filed in the US District Court for the Northern District of California in San Francisco

Mr Trump last week said he believed the lower courts could rule against him, but he hoped he would prevail in the Supreme Court

 The complainants have a tough battle on their hands. The lawsuit states that the President "has used the pretext of a manufactured 'crisis' of unlawful immigration to declare a national emergency and redirect federal dollars appropriated for drug interdiction, military construction and law enforcement initiatives toward building a wall

" He has repeatedly publicly railed against "criminal" immigrants bringing drugs over the border, a claim contested by Democrats, who say narcotics are more likely to enter through legal entry points

 The Justice Department is expected to argue that the court should not look at the facts about the border, but instead must defer to his decision

There is no official standard for what conditions have to be met before a president can declare a national emergency

 The judge will also need decide whether the dispute is properly before the court

The plaintiffs must establish that they are suffering some particular injury, with advocacy group Public Citizen filing a lawsuit on Friday on behalf of Texas landowners

 The Center for Biological Diversity has filed a suit claiming a border barrier would affect wildlife, and the American Civil Liberties Union is preparing a claim that military funds can only be redirected for construction projects that support the armed forces

 California Attorney-General Xavier Becerra told the New York Times he would argue that individual in states that are not on the border could still "lose funding that they paid for with their tax dollars, money that was destined for drug interdiction or for the Department of Defence for military men and women and military installations

" — With wires

For more infomation >> Trump unleashes as 16 states sue him over border wall emergency declaration - Duration: 5:02.

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Group of 16 states led by California sue President Trump, claiming he 'illegally' - Duration: 8:52.

Group of 16 states led by California sue President Trump, claiming he 'illegally' declared a national emergency in a bid to get $5.7 billion to help build the wall

A coalition of 16 U.S. states led by California sued President Donald Trump's administration on Monday over his decision to declare a national emergency to obtain funds for building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. The lawsuit filed in U.S.

District Court for the Northern District of California came just days after Trump invoked emergency powers on Friday after Congress declined to fulfill his request for $5.7 billion to help build the wall that was his signature 2016 campaign promise.

His move aims to let him spend money appropriated by Congress for other purposes.

Joining in filing the lawsuit are the attorneys general of Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Virginia.

'Today, on Presidents Day, we take President Trump to court to block his misuse of presidential power,' California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said in a statement.

We´re suing President Trump to stop him from unilaterally robbing taxpayer funds lawfully set aside by Congress for the people of our states. For most of us, the Office of the Presidency is not a place for theatre,' added Becerra, a Democrat.

Three Texas landowners and an environmental group filed the first lawsuit against Trump's move on Friday, saying it violates the Constitution and would infringe on their property rights.

The legal challenges could slow down Trump's efforts to build the wall, which he says is needed to check illegal immigration and drug trafficking, but will likely end up at the conservative-leaning U.S.

In a budget deal passed by Congress to avert a second government shutdown, nearly $1. 4 billion was allocated toward border fencing. Trump's emergency order would give him an additional $6. 7 billion beyond what lawmakers authorized.

In television interviews on Sunday and Monday, Becerra said the lawsuit would use Trump's own words against him as evidence there is no national emergency to declare.

Earlier, Trump had said he knew that he did not need to declare an emergency to build the wall, a comment that could now undercut the government's legal argument.

'Presidents don't go in and claim declarations of emergency for the purposes of raiding accounts because they weren't able to get Congress to fund items,' Becerra said on MSNBC.

The legal challenges could slow down Trump's efforts to build the wall, which he says is needed to check illegal immigration and drug trafficking, but will likely end up at the conservative-leaning U.S.

A woman from Honduras is seen running from tear gas with her two children after trying to breach the border.

Earlier, Trump had said he knew that he did not need to declare an emergency to build the wall, a comment that could now undercut the government's legal argument.

A section of the wall is seen being put in place in El Paso, Texas, in January.

A coalition of 16 U.S. states led by California sued President Donald Trump's administration on Monday over his decision to declare a national emergency to obtain funds for building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. The lawsuit filed in U.S.

District Court for the Northern District of California came just days after Trump invoked emergency powers on Friday after Congress declined to fulfill his request for $5.7 billion to help build the wall that was his signature 2016 campaign promise.

His move aims to let him spend money appropriated by Congress for other purposes.

Joining in filing the lawsuit are the attorneys general of Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Virginia.

'Today, on Presidents Day, we take President Trump to court to block his misuse of presidential power,' California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said in a statement.

We´re suing President Trump to stop him from unilaterally robbing taxpayer funds lawfully set aside by Congress for the people of our states. For most of us, the Office of the Presidency is not a place for theatre,' added Becerra, a Democrat.

Three Texas landowners and an environmental group filed the first lawsuit against Trump's move on Friday, saying it violates the Constitution and would infringe on their property rights.

The legal challenges could slow down Trump's efforts to build the wall, which he says is needed to check illegal immigration and drug trafficking, but will likely end up at the conservative-leaning U.S.

In a budget deal passed by Congress to avert a second government shutdown, nearly $1. 4 billion was allocated toward border fencing. Trump's emergency order would give him an additional $6. 7 billion beyond what lawmakers authorized.

In television interviews on Sunday and Monday, Becerra said the lawsuit would use Trump's own words against him as evidence there is no national emergency to declare.

Earlier, Trump had said he knew that he did not need to declare an emergency to build the wall, a comment that could now undercut the government's legal argument.

'Presidents don't go in and claim declarations of emergency for the purposes of raiding accounts because they weren't able to get Congress to fund items,' Becerra said on MSNBC.

The legal challenges could slow down Trump's efforts to build the wall, which he says is needed to check illegal immigration and drug trafficking, but will likely end up at the conservative-leaning U.S.

A woman from Honduras is seen running from tear gas with her two children after trying to breach the border.

Earlier, Trump had said he knew that he did not need to declare an emergency to build the wall, a comment that could now undercut the government's legal argument.

A section of the wall is seen being put in place in El Paso, Texas, in January.

For more infomation >> Group of 16 states led by California sue President Trump, claiming he 'illegally' - Duration: 8:52.

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16 States Sue to Stop Trumps Use of Emergency Powers to Build Border Wall The New York Times - Duration: 7:43.

16 States Sue to Stop Trumps Use of Emergency Powers to Build Border Wall The New York Times

By and

WASHINGTON — A coalition of 16 states, including California and New York, on Monday challenged President Trump in court over his plan to use emergency powers to spend billions of dollars on his border wall.

The lawsuit is part of a constitutional confrontation that Mr. Trump set off on Friday when he declared that he would spend billions of dollars more on border barriers than Congress had granted him. The clash raises questions over congressional control of spending, the scope of emergency powers granted to the president, and how far the courts are willing to go to settle such a dispute.

The suit, filed in Federal District Court in San Francisco, argues that the president does not have the power to divert funds for constructing a wall along the Mexican border because it is Congress that controls spending.

Xavier Becerra, the attorney general of California, said in an interview that the president himself had undercut his argument that there was an emergency on the border.

Probably the best evidence is the presidents own words, he said, referring to : I didnt need to do this, but Id rather do it much faster.

The lawsuit, California et al. v. Trump et al., says that the plaintiff states are going to court to protect their residents, natural resources and economic interests. Contrary to the will of Congress, the president has used the pretext of a manufactured crisis of unlawful immigration to declare a national emergency and redirect federal dollars appropriated for drug interdiction, military construction and law enforcement initiatives toward building a wall on the United States Mexico border, the lawsuit says.

Heres how President Trumps border wall fits on the list of emergency declarations.

to challenge the presidents declaration. The Democrat controlled House of Representatives may take a two prong approach when it returns from a recess. One would be to bring a lawsuit of its own.

Lawmakers could also vote to override the declaration that an emergency exists, but it is doubtful that Congress has the votes to override Mr. Trumps certain veto, leaving the courts a more likely venue.

Joining California and New York are Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon and Virginia. All but one, Maryland, have Democratic governors, and most have legislatures controlled by Democrats.

The dispute stems from steps Mr. Trump said he would take after lawmakers granted him only dollar 1.375 billion for new border barriers, legislation he signed last week to avoid another government shutdown.

Mr. Trump asserted the power to tap three additional pots of money on his own: dollar 600 million from a Treasury Department asset forfeiture fund for law enforcement priorities; about dollar 2.5 billion from a military antidrug account, most of which would be siphoned from other military programs the Pentagon largely has yet to identify; and dollar 3.6 billion in military construction funds he said he could redirect by invoking an emergency powers statute.

Presidents have invoked emergency powers statutes nearly five dozen times since Congress enacted the National Emergencies Act of 1976, but never before has one been used to make an end run around Congress after it rejected funding for a particular policy.

But as the debate over Mr. Trumps action shifts to courtrooms, legal experts warned that its fate may turn less on such high constitutional principle and more on complex legal issues — from whether plaintiffs can establish that the case is properly before the courts, to how to interpret several statutes.

Even though Trumps political maneuver to get around an uncooperative Congress looks like it stretches the Constitution, the questions presented in court will raise ordinary and complicated issues of administrative law, said Peter M. Shane, an Ohio State University law professor and co author of .

Two cases had already been filed after Mr. Trumps announcement on Feb. 15 — one , representing several Texas landowners and a Texas environmental group, and the other by the Center for Biological Diversity, Defenders of Wildlife and the Animal Legal Defense Fund.

At least two other lawsuits are expected to be filed later this week. The American Civil Liberties Union has announced its intention to file a case, but has not yet publicly identified its client. The other case will be brought by Protect Democracy, another watchdog group, and the Niskanen Center, a center right policy institute, on behalf of El Paso County and the Border Network for Human Rights.

Many critics have challenged whether an emergency truly exists on the Southern border that a wall would solve, pointing to government data showing that the number of people crossing illegally has dropped significantly over the past generation and that most drugs are smuggled through ports of entry.

The president has argued, without proof, that the emergency declaration is warranted because the migrants invading the United States across the Mexico border have caused epidemics of crime and drug use.

Legal specialists expected the Justice Department to urge a court not to consider facts about the border or Mr. Trumps words, but rather to defer to the presidents decision. The courts have a long history of being reluctant to substitute their own judgment for the presidents about a security threat.

The Trump administration will have a powerful argument to invoke: In the National Emergencies Act, Congress defined no standard for what conditions have to be met before a president may determine that a qualifying crisis exists.

But before a judge could weigh whether Mr. Trump invoked the statute legitimately, he or she would have to decide whether the dispute is properly before the court in the first place.

Plaintiffs will need to establish standing by showing that they are suffering some particular injury from what Mr. Trump is doing. Several of the lawsuits involve people who own land or represent communities along the Mexican border in Texas, where Mr. Trump has put the focus of his emphasis on the need for more barriers.

But it is not clear whether any of the fencing will be built in California or New Mexico, two of the states in the lawsuit, and it certainly will not be built in other states involved in the litigation, like New York, New Jersey or Hawaii.

Mr. Becerra, Californias attorney general, suggested that plaintiffs in the states lawsuits have standing for reasons that are unrelated to whether any portions of Mr. Trumps wall will be built in their territory, arguing that the presidents unconstitutional action could cause harms in many parts of the country.

People in California and other plaintiff states could lose funding that they paid for with their tax dollars, money that was destined for drug interdiction or for the Department of Defense for military men and women and military installations, he said in the interview.

Further complicating matters, the administration has said it intends to spend the funds in sequence, starting with the dollar 1.375 billion Congress appropriated, and reaching the emergency power military construction fund last. The Justice Department is likely to argue that if no disputed spending is imminent, the case is not ripe for litigation and should be dismissed.

Ian Bassin, the executive director of Protect Democracy, said that El Paso County would probably argue that its economy was being harmed by Mr. Trumps emergency declaration because it signaled to businesses and potential tourists that they should stay away.

The Justice Department declined to comment on the wave of lawsuits. Mr. Trump has said he expected to be sued and to lose in lower courts, but he predicted he would eventually prevail before the Supreme Court.

But plaintiffs can also challenge whether the administration is interpreting several statutes correctly.

The that gives the secretary of defense authority to transfer some Pentagon money from the antidrug account Mr. Trump is planning to tap, for example, says its authority may be used in no case where the item for which funds are requested has been denied by the Congress — raising the question of whether extra funding for border barriers counts as such a forbidden item.

And the Mr. Trump plans to use permits military construction spending in an emergency that requires the use of the armed forces for projects to support such use. That has been used before to build up foreign military bases in a war effort, but litigants challenge whether a permanent wall to help civilian agencies police the border qualifies under that wording.

Judges will certainly be aware of the larger institutional context when they address those technical issues, but that awareness will not, by itself, determine how the legal questions get resolved, Mr. Shane said.

An earlier version of this article misidentified one of the states involved in the litigation. Washington State is not a party to the suit.

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