On the eve of her trip to the southern border in Texas with President
Trump, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen told Fox News'
"Hannity" that it was "offensive" and "disrespectful" for top Democrats
to accuse Republicans of exploiting illegal immigration for political gain.
Speaking
earlier Wednesday, Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez
echoed Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s language, telling Fox News’ “America’s Newsroom" that "this whole border security crisis … it really, I believe, is a manufactured crisis."
Nielsen,
who met with congressional leaders Wednesday in the Situation Room with
President Trump and has played a central role during talks to end
a partial federal government shutdown, called that rhetoric disgraceful. TRUMP WALKS OUT OF EXPLOSIVE WHITE HOUSE MEETING AFTER PELOSI REFUSES TO CONSIDER WALL
The DHS head alluded to the several Americans killed by suspected illegal immigrants that Trump referenced
in his Tuesday night prime-time address from the Oval Office, including
a California police officer whose death came the day after Christmas.
"It's
offensive; it's disrespectful," Nielsen said. "I can't imagine being
one of these victims' families and listening to an elected member of
Congress claim that their pain and their suffering is manufactured. it's
offensive, is what it is. But it's also unprofessional."
Nielsen reiterated the president's messaging that the surging numbers of illegal immigrant families attempting to cross the border represents a humanitarian problem.
"It's
not just a security crisis -- it's a humanitarian crisis," Nielsen told
host Sean Hannity. "We have Doctors Without Borders saying one in
three women on this journey are raped. seven out of 10 of these migrants
are victims of violence."
A survey from 2015 to 2016
conducted by Doctors Without Borders that interviewed 467 "randomly
sampled migrants and refugees in facilities the organization supports in
Mexico" found that "nearly one-third of the women surveyed had been
sexually abused during their journey." Among the reported perpetrators
were gangs and members of the Mexican security forces.
"Walls work. We can't say it enough." — Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen
"The
facts are incontroverible," Nielsen added. "Anywhere we have built a
wall, illegal migration has dropped 90-95 percent. ... Walls work. We
can't say it enough."
In a joint, nationally televised rebuttal to
Trump's speech Tuesday night, Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer condemned Trump's rhetoric and
what they called his "obsession" with building a border wall.
"They
have no alternative," Nielsen told Hannity, referring to congressional
Democrats. "They refuse to engage, and it's very, very disappointing.
"I
don't know what the Democrats are doing," Nielsen concluded. "The
president has made offers. ... They have come up with no solutions on
their own."
U.S. District Judge Mark Walker said newly inaugurated Gov.
Ron DeSantis must grant former Broward County elections supervisor
Brenda Snipes a “meaningful opportunity to be heard” regarding her
suspension by March 31. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
Former Broward County elections supervisor Brenda Snipes may be getting redeemed, as a Florida federal judge ruled Wednesday that former Gov. and current Sen. Rick Scott violated her constitutional rights when he suspended and “vilified” her without first allowing her to make her own case.
U.S.
District Judge Mark Walker said newly inaugurated Gov. Ron DeSantis
must grant Snipes a “meaningful opportunity to be heard” regarding her
suspension by March 31.
Snipes came under fire during the
contentious recount that followed the 2018 elections and a legally
required recount in close races for governor and U.S. Senate. In the aftermath of the November election, Snipes said she would resign on Jan. 4, but Scott immediately suspended her. Snipes then tried to rescind her resignation and challenged the governor’s suspension as “malicious” and politically motivated.
Walker
ruled that Scott’s decision was an “effective termination” and violated
Snipes’ due-process rights. The judge also said Scott’s order
suspending Snipes contained “falsehoods.”
Still, Walker said he
did not have the authority to reinstate Snipes, writing that the court
was “not determining what the ultimate outcome will or should be.”
Snipes
sued both Scott and the GOP-controlled Florida Senate. The lawsuit
named the Senate because that chamber’s Republican leader said there
wasn't time to investigate the allegations against Snipes before her
resignation took effect. Florida law requires the Senate to either
remove or reinstate county officials suspended by the governor.
Snipes
had been the top elections official in Broward County since 2003, when
then-Gov. Jeb Bush appointed her. She had been elected three times and
her current term was not scheduled to end until 2020.
Attorneys
for Scott had argued the governor had the authority to remove her from
office. Neither Scott nor DeSantis immediately responded to requests for
comment on the decision.
Scott
suspended Snipes for misfeasance, incompetence and neglect of duty, and
appointed his former general counsel to take her place. In his
executive order, Scott cited problems during the recount, including
reports of more than 2,000 ballots being misplaced.
Snipes' attorney, Burnadette Norris-Weeks, contended that some of the problems cited by Scott were not caused by her client.
Daniel
Nordby, who has been Scott’s general counsel, said the governor took
action when he did because he “determined the people of Broward County
deserved a supervisor of elections” who could prepare for upcoming
spring municipal elections in a “competent manner.”
Democratic Party megadonor Ed Buck faces
new questions this week after Los Angeles County sheriff’s detectives
opened an investigation into the second death of a man -- who
authorities have reportedly identified as 55-year-old Timothy Dean -- at
Buck's home in less than two years, and a third man came forward with
an account of what he described as his drug-fueled interactions with the
well-connected Californian.
Deputies
in West Hollywood responded early Monday morning to a report of a
person not breathing at Buck's home, and county firefighters pronounced
the man dead. The cause of the death will be determined by the coroner,
according to Nicole Nishida, a spokeswoman for the sheriff’s department,
and investigators have not released the man's identity.
But,
critics are questioning whether Buck's race — both men found dead were
black — or if his wealth or political ties to the Democratic Party
influenced an initial investigation of the 64-year-old who has donated
tens of thousands of dollars to a slew of liberal causes and candidates
over the years, including Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and a who's who of top California politicians.
“He
definitely has not been cooperative, as his attorney says. He refused
to answer any questions when I tried speaking with him,” Los Angeles
County Sheriff's Department Homicide Investigator Quilmes Rodriguez told
Fox News via email Wednesday night.
Officials said the
investigation of the second death will include a review of the first
man's death, in 2017. In that case, Gemmel Moore, a young black man, was
found dead in Buck's apartment. After a slow-moving investigation that
went on for months, Buck was not charged. DEMOCRATIC MEGADONOR TOM STEYER BACKS AWAY FROM PRESIDENTIAL RUN
“On
July 27, 2017 there was a death investigation of a male adult, Gemmel
Moore, who was determined to have overdosed at the same location. Mr.
Edward Buck was present during both incidents,” the most recent
statement said.
Meanwhile, on Wednesday, The Daily Mail published
an account by Jermaine Gagnon, 28, who claimed he narrowly escaped
death in Buck’s apartment. Gagnon, who said he met Buck online in
April 2018, claimed the Democratic megadonor flew him from Minnesota to
Los Angeles.
“He was quite open about being very generous to the
black community,” Gagnon said about Buck. “I’m his type, and pretty much
half of the black community is his type — vulnerable, depressed. If
you’re in a depressive state, that’s the energy that feeds him.”
Gagnon
charged that Buck injected him with crystal methamphetamine at his sex
toy-filled apartment. Gagnon told The Mail: “He took my phone. I was so
scared. I felt death walked into my soul. I called my mother. I said, ‘I
feel like he’s going to kill me, I think I’m going to die.’” Attorney Seymour Amster, Buck's attorney, said after Monday’s death that Buck was not arrested, and was cooperating with investigators.
“From
what I know, it was an old friend who died of an accidental overdose,
and unfortunately, we believe that the substance was ingested at some
place other than the apartment,” Amster said. “The person came over
intoxicated.”
Amster did not return Fox News' emails and phone calls about the Gagnon report. A massive protest erupted
outside Buck’s apartment Monday night. The Daily Mail reported more
than 100 people gathered to demand answers and accountability.
“Arrest
Ed Buck, prosecute Ed Buck, and then a jury needs to convict Ed Buck,”
activist Jasmyne Cannick said to the crowd. “This man has had two dead
bodies in his house, and he is still in his house.”
Said another demonstrator: “This man is a danger to our community.”
Buck’s support of political causes began in 1987 in Arizona. That year, The New York Times
described Buck, then a registered Republican, as a “33-year-old
millionaire entrepreneur who retired from the insurance service business
a year ago” to become politically active.
He took the reins of a
recall drive that year against then-Gov. Evan Mecham, a Republican who'd
drawn widespread publicity for canceling a Martin Luther King Jr.
holiday for state workers.
During the campaign, it was disclosed
that Buck had been arrested twice. He was accused of public indecency in
an adult bookstore in 1983, and in 1987 faced a charge of obtaining a
drug without a proper prescription. The public indecency charge was
reduced to disturbing the peace, and Buck paid a $26 fine. Prosecution
in the drug case was suspended after he agreed to counseling. The Times
reported Tuesday that Buck has given more than $116,000 to Democratic
politicians and groups, including about $1,500 to support Obama and
$2,950 to Clinton, according to OpenSecrets.org, which tracks campaign fundraising. CNN reported
that Buck, in 2017, gave $10,400 to the Getting Stuff Done PAC
affiliated with Democratic Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, $2,700 to
Rep. Ted Lieu of California, and $1,000 each to Rep. Jimmy Gomez of
California, Rep. Pete Aguilar of California, Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi of
Illinois, and former Sen. Joe Donnelly of Indiana.
In a statement
to The Associated Press, Lieu said he was “deeply disturbed” by the
disclosure of a second death at Buck's home and was donating
contributions he received from Buck to charity.
After Fox News
reported on the initial investigation of Buck last year, at least six
Democrats in California and Arizona confirmed they had returned or
redirected donations from him.
Buck is a past candidate for the
West Hollywood City Council and is well known in LGBTQ political
circles. In response to the latest death, the Los Angeles LGBT Center
called for a full investigation. “While much is still to be learned, it
appears this tragedy is linked to substance use. LGBT people and other
marginalized groups are at elevated risk for impacts that result from
the current epidemic uses of opioids, methamphetamine, and other
dangerous drugs,” the center said.
“It says a lot about the dark
underbelly of gay culture and West Hollywood,” Steve Martin, a former
West Hollywood city councilman who is gay, told The Los Angeles Times.
“We always are slapping ourselves on the back about how open-minded and
diverse we are, and frankly the residents know that’s not always the
case. When an incident like this comes up, it makes us confront a lot of
issues that are really uncomfortable.”
The Times reported that 46
percent of West Hollywood residents identify as LGBTQ, according to
community surveys; the city is 80 percent white.
Gemmel Moore, 26, was found dead at Ed Buck’s West Hollywood apartment on July 27, 2017. (Facebook)
Buck lived in a rent-controlled apartment block for the last 22 years. The Daily Beast reported that Buck’s neighbors were suspicious he lived a “double life.”
Beatriz
Albuquerque, 29, who lives in the apartment next door to Buck, told The
Daily Beast he had men over almost every day: “Usually it’s like one a
day, but almost every day he has somebody come over. Every time he has
people over, they’re usually quiet. It’s not like he has crazy parties.”
Albuquerque
and her husband, Josh Tedla, 31, told The Daily Beast Buck’s guests
seemed “normal but sometimes a little weird,” and the young men often
would hang around the building after stopping over or sitting on the
doorstep waiting for Buck to let them back in.
As for Buck's
relationship with Moore, Amster has previously described them as
friends, and said his client had nothing to do with that death.
A charge evaluation worksheet obtained by The Los Angeles Times
said the “admissible evidence is insufficient to prove beyond a
reasonable doubt that suspect Buck furnished drugs to Gemmel Moore or
that suspect Buck possessed drugs.”
An autopsy report said Moore
died of a methamphetamine overdose. He was found naked on a mattress in
the living room with drug paraphernalia littered about.
Just one day after he walked out of a contentious White House meeting
with Congressional leaders, President Trump is preparing personally to
visit the southern border as he continues to contemplate whether to declare a national emergency to fund a wall there.
Trump
is scheduled to visit near the U.S.-Mexico border in McAllen, Texas, a
city of 143,000 on the river, on Thursday, which would be the 20th day
of the ongoing partial federal government shutdown affecting nearly
800,000 federal workers. Trump is expected to be joined by his senior
adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner, acting White House chief of staff
Mick Mulvaney, and Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen.
While details on Trump's travel schedule are scant, a local paper
reported that advance teams from the Secret Service have locked down
the Anzalduas Park in Mission, Texas that "sits along the Rio Grande in
the shadow of the Anzalduas International Bridge and is frequently
patrolled by Border Patrol agents attempting to intercept those crossing
into the country illegally."
White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders first announced the border trip on Monday,
saying the president would "meet with those on the frontlines of the
national security and humanitarian crisis." (The president previously viewed wall prototypes near the border in San Diego, Calif. in March 2018.)
Responding to a report in The New York Times
suggesting Trump did not really want to go on the Thursday trip and saw
the visit as a necessary publicity stunt organized by his
communications team, White House adviser Kellyanne Conway on Wednesday
told reporters Trump was "enthusiastic" and "does want to meet with men
and women" protecting the border "to hear what it is they see, what they
need."
FILE - In this Monday, Jan. 7, 2019, file photo, floodlights from
the U.S, illuminate multiple border walls, seen from Tijuana, Mexico.
(AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File)
It increasingly appeared possible that Trump, who repeatedly has threatened to declare a state of emergency, may use the visit to determine whether to take that extraordinary step.
The National Emergencies Act
grants the president broad authority to declare emergencies, and
several federal laws then could clear a path for the White House to move
ahead with building a wall.
One statute, 33 U.S. Code § 2293 -
"Reprogramming during national emergencies," permits the president to
"apply the resources of the Department of the Army’s civil works
program, including funds, personnel, and equipment, to construct or
assist in the construction, operation, maintenance, and repair of
authorized civil works, military construction, and civil defense
projects that are essential to the national defense." TRUMP HANDS OUT CANDY, WALKS OUT OF EXPLOSIVE WHITE HOUSE MEETING WITH TOP DEMS
Another law, 10 U.S. Code § 2808
- "Construction authority in the event of a declaration of war or
national emergency," permits the secretary of defense, in a
presidentially declared emergency, to use "funds that have been
appropriated for military construction" for the purpose of undertaking
"military construction projects."
More than 35 million people
watched Trump's first-ever prime-time address Tuesday night from the
Oval Office on the importance of border security, which was followed by a
rebuttal from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Minority
Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. Trump did not declare a state of emergency
during that address, instead calling for compromise -- although he did not budge on his demand for $5.7 billion in funding for a border wall.
Nevertheless,
on Wednesday, both sides seemed further than ever from the compromise
that Trump demanded in his address. The Democratic-led House approved a
bill to fund the Treasury Department, the IRS and other agencies for the
next year as part of a strategy to reopen the government on a piecemeal
basis, but Senate Republicans dismissed the attempt as a nonstarter
without any wall funding. Eight Republicans supported the measure.
The
acting director of the White House budget office, Russell Vought,
promised this week that tax refunds still would go out even if the IRS
remained unfunded, because customary rules will be changed to make the
payments possible. He told reporters an "indefinite appropriation" was
available for the refunds, which would go out as normal.
Trump walked out of a White House meeting
with congressional leaders Wednesday afternoon over the partial
government shutdown, Pelosi again rejected supporting new funding for a
border wall, according to those in the meeting.
Workers replace sections of the border wall, left, with new sections, right, on Tuesday in Tijuana, Mexico.
(AP)
Although most top Republicans backed
Trump on Wednesday -- with House Minority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La.,
calling Trump's remarks “a firm commitment to reopening the government
while also securing our southern border" -- there were some signs that
not all Republicans were aligned with the White House.
GOP West
Virginia Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, a member of the Homeland Security
appropriations subcommittee, dismissed Trump's comments that the
shutdown could go on for "years." Seven Republicans voted in favor of a
Democratic bill to end the shutdown last week without funding for a
border wall, and more have come out suggesting that they will back
individual bills to fund certain agencies in the federal government
without wall funding.
But, any defections were few and far between, Republican leaders insisted.
"Quite
frankly, I see no wavering,” North Carolina Republican Rep. Mark
Meadows, who chairs the conservative House Freedom Caucus, said
Wednesday.
Some money already has been appropriated to construct
additional barriers on the southern border. In March, Congress funded 33
miles of walls and fencing in Texas, and the federal government has
started surveying land along the border in the state and announced plans
to start construction next month.
The government has laid out
plans that would cut across private land in the Rio Grande Valley. Those
in the way would include landowners who have lived in the valley for
generations, environmental groups and a 19th-century chapel.
Democratic
New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, meanwhile, announced this week
she would visit her state’s southern border with Mexico on Friday.
Grisham,
who has described Trump’s idea for a wall as outdated and ineffectual,
previously indicated she would reconsider the state’s deployment of
National Guard troops to the border by Republican predecessor Susana
Martinez. The state sent about 180 troops.
Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky. arrives on Capitol Hill in
Washington, Thursday, Jan. 3, 2019, as the 116th Congress begins. (AP
Photo/Andrew Harnik)
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY.) accuses democrats of
hypocrisy over their stance border security as the partial government
shutdown continues.
Speaking from the Senate floor on Tuesday, McConnell gave examples of
numerous democrats saying they supported a physical barrier at the
southern border before President Trump took office.
He included Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and current Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.
McConnell referred to the Secure Fence Act of 2006, which was
supported by 90 democrat congress members, and included funding for
fencing along around 700 miles of the southern border.
The Act was backed by Obama, Clinton, and Schumer.
McConnell also rebuked Nancy Pelosi’s recent comments that walls are “immoral.”
He claimed walls and barriers are not immoral and questioned if
democrats are only opposing a barrier now because they want to oppose
the President.
The GOP leader indicated democrats are willing to go against the
President on any issue, for any reason, and went on to say the Senate
will only vote on funding legislation that can pass and the President
says he’ll sign.
Two members of Congress -- one a Republican, the other a Democrat --
who survived gunshot wounds in recent years shared an embrace on the
House floor Tuesday as they marked the eighth anniversary of the attack
against one of them.
The moment shared by U.S. Rep. Steve Scalise,
R-La., and former Rep. Gabby Giffords, D-Ariz., came shortly before
newly elected House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep. Mike Thompson,
D-Calif., unveiled a gun control bill that would require background checks for private gun sales.
Eight years ago, Giffords survived an assassination attempt outside a Tucson, Ariz. supermarket
where she was meeting with her constituents. Six other people were left
dead and Giffords suffered significant brain injuries. Since
recovering, Giffords has become one of the country’s most outspoken
gun-control advocates.
Scalise survived a shooting attempt in June 2017
when a gunman targeted him as Republicans practiced for a congressional
baseball game on a ballfield in Alexandria, Va. At the time he was the
third-ranking member of the House Republican leadership. He returned to
Congress in September of that year and said he was a “living example
that miracles really do happen.”
Giffords arrived in Washington to
join Pelosi and Thompson for the unveiling of the new gun control bill,
which would expand background checks for sales and transfers of
firearms.
Giffords,
who co-founded a gun safety group with her husband, former astronaut
Mark Kelly, said in a statement Friday she was thrilled that her former
House colleagues were responding to a gun-violence epidemic that killed
nearly 40,000 people in 2017.
The bill calling for expanded
background checks "marks a critical first step toward strengthening
America's gun laws and making our country a safer place to live, work,
study, worship and play," Giffords said. "I stand ready to do everything
in my power to get this legislation across the finish line."
But
National Rifle Association Institute for Legislative Action spokeswoman
Jennifer Baker dismissed the Democrats' proposal, commenting that a
federal background check did not prevent Giffords' shooting.
"[S]o-called universal background checks will never be universal because criminals do not comply with the law," she said.
Rep.
Richard Hudson, R-N.C., who is one of the NRA's biggest supporters,
said the legislation "does nothing to prevent gun violence, yet
threatens the constitutional rights of law-abiding citizens."
Despite
bipartisan support for gun control, the bill is unlikely to become law
given the GOP's control of the Senate and President Trump's promise to
"protect the Second Amendment."
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, left, and D-N.Y., Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., center, walk down the House steps.
(AP)
Newly-elected Democratic
House Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortex, D-N.Y., who despite tweeting last
month that members of Congress should ‘have some integrity’
and not take a paycheck during the government shutdown, has remained
silent on whether she’ll take a salary during the partial government
shutdown, despite 13 of her fellow congress members vowing that they
won’t.
Ocasio-Cortez’s office on Thursday reportedly refused to respond to The Daily Mail’s inquiry about whether she’ll be taking a salary, while approximately 800,000 federal workers are furloughed or working without pay.
It was not the first time she appeared to evade or ignore the question. When asked last week by The New York Post whether she would take a salary during the government shutdown, the 29-year-old representative said: “I’ve gotta run.” CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
Congressional
staff and members of Congress are being paid through the shutdown
because the legislative branch was funded last year through fiscal year
2019. Ocasio-Cortez’s salary kicked in last Thursday after she was sworn
in as a Democratic lawmaker representing New York.
The
departments of justice, interior, transportation and homeland security
were either sent home or are working without pay. The first pay period
for those workers is Jan. 11.
Other newly-elected lawmakers – both
democratic and republican – have said they will either refuse or donate
their paycheck during the shutdown, The Washington Post reported.
President
Trump used his first-ever prime time address from the Oval Office on
Tuesday night to make his case for funding a southern border wall -- as
well as to emphasize the human cost of what he called the "growing
humanitarian and security crisis" of surging illegal immigration.
The
speech, which was followed moments later by a rebuttal from Senate
Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, drew
seemingly deep lines in the sand as Republicans and Democrats plan to
meet Wednesday to continue negotiations to end the ongoing partial
federal government shutdown over border wall funding, now in its third
week. Trump has said the shutdown could last for "years" if no deal is reached.
Noting
that "more Americans will die from drugs this year than were killed in
the entire Vietnam War," the president, looking directly into the
camera, called for closing the pipeline that permits "vast quantities of
illegal drugs – including meth, heroin, cocaine and fentanyl" from
crossing the border.
"Every week, 300 of our citizens are killed
by heroin alone – 90 percent of which floods across from our southern
border," Trump, who signed a bipartisan opioid bill into law late last year, remarked at the beginning of his address.
He
continued: "This is a humanitarian crisis – a crisis of the heart and a
crisis of the soul. Last month, 20,000 migrant children were illegally
brought into the United States – a dramatic increase. These children are
used as human pawns by vicious coyotes and ruthless gangs. One in three
women are sexually assaulted on the dangerous trek up through
Mexico. Women and children are the biggest victims by far of our broken
system."
The president then paid tribute to several Americans killed by suspected illegal immigrants, including California police Cpl. Ronil Singh,
who was murdered the day after Christmas -- allegedly by an illegal
immigrant suspected of driving drunk. The suspect had multiple prior
arrests, and Republicans have charged that California's sanctuary laws
-- which prevent local law enforcement from cooperating with federal
immigration authorities -- led to Singh's murder.
"America’s
heart broke the day after Christmas when a young police officer in
California was savagely murdered in cold-blood by an illegal alien who
just came across the border," Trump said. "The life of an American hero
was stolen by someone who had no right to be in our country." TUCKER CARLSON: WHY DO SOME CONTINUE TO DENY ISSUES AT THE BORDER?
Trump
added: "In California, an Air Force Veteran was raped, murdered and
beaten to death with a hammer by an illegal alien with a long criminal
history. In Georgia, an illegal alien was recently charged with murder
for killing, beheading, and dismembering his neighbor. In Maryland,
MS-13 gang members who arrived in the United States as unaccompanied
minors were arrested and charged last year after viciously stabbing and
beating a 16-year-old girl.
"Wealthy politicians
... don’t build walls because they hate the people on the outside, but
because they love the people on the inside." — President Trump
"Over
the last several years, I’ve met with dozens of families whose loved
ones were stolen by illegal immigration," Trump continued. "I’ve held
the hands of the weeping mothers and embraced the grief-stricken
fathers. So sad. So terrible. I will never forget the pain in their
eyes, the tremble in their voices, or the sadness gripping their souls.
How much more American blood must be shed before Congress does its job?"
Apparently
responding to Pelosi's widely reported comment that a wall would be
immoral, Trump remarked: "Some have suggested a barrier is immoral.
Then why do wealthy politicians build walls, fences and gates around
their homes? They don’t build walls because they hate the people on the
outside, but because they love the people on the inside."
In a
joint, nationally televised response broadcast minutes later, Pelosi,
D-Calif., and Schumer, D-N.Y., condemned Trump's rhetoric and what they
called his "obsession" with building a border wall.
"Much of what
we have heard from President Trump throughout this senseless shutdown
has been full of misinformation and even malice," Pelosi, standing next
to Schumer, charged. "The President has chosen fear. We want to start
with the facts."
"The fact is: On the very first day of this
Congress, House Democrats passed Senate Republican legislation to
re-open government and fund smart, effective border security solutions,"
Pelosi said, referring to bills that did not include funding for
Trump's border wall.
"But, the president is rejecting these
bipartisan bills which would re-open government – over his obsession
with forcing American taxpayers to waste billions of dollars on an
expensive and ineffective wall – a wall he always promised Mexico would
pay for," Pelosi continued.
Schumer added afterward: "There is an
obvious solution: separate the shutdown from the arguments over border
security. There is bipartisan legislation – supported by Democrats and
Republicans – to re-open government while allowing debate over border
security to continue.
"The
symbol of America should be the Statue of Liberty, not a thirty-foot
wall," Schumer concluded. "So, our suggestion is a simple one, Mr.
President: Re-open the government and we can work to resolve our
differences over border security. But end this shutdown now."
On social media, the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) called out Schumer and Pelosi's previously strong support for border wall funding, and appeared to join in with other Twitter users mocking the two senators' demeanor during their response address.
Conservative commentator Ben Shaprio compared Pelosi and Schumer's look to that of the nefarious fictional villains from the James Bond spy franchise, before reposting another Twitter user's image depicting Schumer as a used car salesman. Others likened Pelosi to the aristocratic character Lucille Bluth in the television comedy series "Arrested Development."
Vermont
Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders, widely considered a potential 2020
presidential contender, delivered his own rebuttal that asserted climate
change and health care are more urgent crises than illegal immigration.
Sanders listed a variety of people who will potentially suffer if the
shutdown continues.
"Security at our nation’s airports could be
threatened if TSA employees and air traffic controllers are not getting
paid," Sanders said. "You want a national emergency? 30 million
Americans have no health insurance and many more are under-insured."
Negotiations
are slated to continue throughout the week to resolve the
shutdown, which has furloughed 380,000 federal workers and forced an
additional 420,000 to work without pay. On Wednesday, Fox News learned,
Trump will head to Capitol Hill for a policy lunch with Senate
Republicans. Congressional leaders from both parties have been invited
to the White House for a 3 p.m. ET sit-down afterward.
The
president, during his address Tuesday, vowed that the wall "would very
quickly pay for itself" in part because the cost of "illegal drugs
exceeds $500 billion dollars a year – vastly more than the $5.7 billion
dollars we have requested from Congress." Trump added that "the wall
will also be paid for, indirectly, by the great new trade deal we have
made with Mexico."
Migrants running as U.S. Border Protection officers threw tear gas
to the Mexican side of the border fence on Jan. 1, 2019. (AP
Photo/Daniel Ochoa de Olza)
On Thursday, Trump plans a personal visit to the
Mexican border, where his administration said an illegal immigration
"crisis" has been worsening by the day.
Reacting to Trump's
speech, Senate Republican leaders -- who have said they will not pass
Democrats' spending bills without border wall funding -- reaffirmed that
they've stood by the White House's position.
“Tonight, President
Trump reaffirmed his commitment to addressing the humanitarian and
security crisis at our nation’s southern border," Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said in a statement. "His proposal to increase
security through physical barriers suits the reality on the ground. It’s
what career Border Patrol experts support and are asking for. And it
simply builds on earlier legislation that Senate Democrats like
then-Senator Obama, then-Senator Clinton, and Senator Schumer previously
supported with enthusiasm."
McConnell
continued: “The past eighteen days have shown that Democrats’ refusal
to negotiate is not due to any principled objection, but simply due to
partisan spite for the president. For the men and women of the Border
Patrol, for the safety of American families, and for all Americans who
deserve a fully operational federal government, I sincerely hope my
Democratic colleagues will come to the table and help deliver a
solution.”
Some legal and political analysts were less
enthusiastic. “As expected, [Trump's address] was laden with emotional
appeals, with the president presenting a parade of horribles," John
Cerone, Professor of International Law at The Fletcher School, told Fox
News. He added that a wall would have only "limited efficacy" compared
to other options.
"Ultimately, the only way to stop irregular
migration is to give people some hope of regular migration," Cerone
said. "Expanding pathways for regular migration, in particular by
creating new employment visas and raising the limits on existing
categories, is a win-win situation."
The number of illegal border
crossings is down from 1.6 million in 2000 to less than 400,000 last
year. But, the number of families coming over the border has risen
sharply, putting a strain on health care and immigration services that
came into sharp focus with the deaths of two migrant children in
December.
Administration figures have shown that 161,000 family
units crossed the border in fiscal 2018, a 50 percent increase from the
year before. Homeland Security officials also have said 60,000
unaccompanied children crossed the border last year, a 25 percent
increase.
Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, left, Vice President
Mike Pence, White House legislative affairs aide Ja'Ron Smith, followed
by White House Senior Adviser Jared Kushner, and others, after a
meeting with staff members of House and Senate leadership last Saturday
in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
After a sit-down with Democrats over the weekend, the
White House issued a series of budget demands, including a new request
for $800,000 for humanitarian needs. But, mostly, Trump still wants his
wall, which Democrats have described as immoral as well as no solution
to illegal immigration.
In a pre-emptive move, the White House
said Monday that tax refunds would be paid despite the shutdown. That
shutdown exemption would break from past practice and could be
challenged.
Emphasizing that he was not abandoning his security
argument, Trump said in a fundraising email Tuesday: "I want to make one
thing clear to Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi: Your safety is not a
political game or a negotiation tactic!"
Pelosi,
for her part, has also sparred openly with the White House. She
reportedly engaged in a tense confrontation with Nielsen on Wednesday in
the Situation Room, interrupting Nielsen’s presentation on border
security and illegal immigration, telling her, “I reject your facts.”
In
her brief response address on Tuesday night, Pelosi used the word
"facts" six times, in an effort to contrast with what she called Trump's
rhetoric of "fear."