Biden cancels military-funded border wall projects https://t.co/hic9Czi1ZI >>><> Of course he does! it is one more step to completely open borders!
— Bo Snerdley (@BoSnerdley) April 30, 2021
Joe is cancelling projects to build a wall along the southern border using diverted defense funds and will use some funding to counter environmental damage from the wall’s construction.
Then-President Trump had diverted billions in defense and military construction funds toward building the wall, using emergency powers after Congress refused to fully fund the project directly.
“Consistent with the President’s Proclamation terminating the redirection of funds for border wall, no more money will be diverted from other purposes to building a border wall,” a Biden administration official said Friday.
A Defense Department spokesperson said the funds would be returned to accounts designated for “schools for military children, overseas military construction projects in partner nations, and the National Guard and Reserve equipment account,” but added that the department was reviewing projects to determine priorities.
Upon entering office, Biden canceled the state of emergency Trump had declared along the southern border and paused construction on the wall in order to conduct a review, though the 60-day period for the review’s completion has long passed.
Republicans in Congress have accused Biden of illegally halting congressionally approved funds, and the Government Accountability Office is preparing a report on whether the pause was legal under the Impoundment Control Act.
Sen. Jim Risch (Idaho), the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relation Committee, said the move would be a blow to national security.
“This is an ill-advised decision at best,”Risch tweeted.
The issue of funding the wall, one the most symbolic policies of the Trump era, was a regular flashpoint between Democrats and Republicans over the past four years.
Trump would regularly request north of $5 billion a year for the wall, much to the chagrin of Democrats.
In order to pass spending bills, which require 60 votes in the Senate, Democrats and Republicans typically compromised on a significantly lower figure, replete with caveats over what could be built or reinforced with the funds.
In late 2018, however, Trump threatened to veto spending bills over lack of wall funding, leading to a 35-day government shutdown, the longest in the nation’s history. When it was over, he declared the state of emergency and announced he would redirect the defense funds and other sources of government money toward building the wall.
—Updated at 4:08 p.m.