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Foran writes: "The House of Representatives on Friday again approved a resolution to overturn President Donald Trump's national emergency border declaration. The vote was 236-174."

Migrants, part of a caravan of thousands from Central America trying to reach the United States, climb down a steep hill near the border wall into the U.S. from Tijuana, Mexico. (photo: Leah Millis/Reuters)
Migrants, part of a caravan of thousands from Central America trying to reach the United States, climb down a steep hill near the border wall into the U.S. from Tijuana, Mexico. (photo: Leah Millis/Reuters)


House Again Approves Resolution to Overturn Trump's Border Emergency Declaration

By Clare Foran, CNN

28 September 19

 

he House of Representatives on Friday again approved a resolution to overturn President Donald Trump's national emergency border declaration. The vote was 236-174.

This comes after the Senate voted earlier this week to pass the resolution of disapproval of the President's emergency declaration at the Southwest border that he has used to justify moving congressional approved appropriations from military construction projects in an effort to build a border wall with Mexico.

The last time Congress passed a resolution to overturn the border emergency, Trump issued a veto in response and the House failed to override it.

Opponents of the emergency declaration can force a vote every six months as long as the emergency declaration is ongoing, though the move is primarily a symbolic rebuke of the President without the votes to overturn a veto.

When the Senate voted earlier this week the vote was 54 to 41, well short of the two-thirds majority required to overcome an expected presidential veto.

The House last voted on a resolution to terminate the border emergency in February, followed by a vote in the Senate in March.

Fights in Congress over the border wall -- Trump's signature campaign issue -- have been a constant theme of the 116th Congress.

A dispute over the President's demand for border wall funding led to a standoff over government funding and a partial shutdown last year that stretched into the new session of Congress.

The annual appropriations process is again underway and disagreements over the border wall have continued to spill out into the open, creating a point of tension as Congress works to again avert another shutdown.

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