After failing to secure funding from Congress for new border barriers, Donald Trump started raiding the Defense Department’s budget, redirecting billions of dollars away from the military and toward his misguided “wall” initiative.
Can the president legally do that? Almost exactly a year ago today, a district court ruled against the White House and deemed the transfer of funds impermissible. Today, as NBC News report, a federal appeals court came to the same conclusion.
The Trump administration does not have the authority to use military funding to pay for construction of a border wall, a federal appeals court panel ruled on Friday. In a 2-1 ruling, a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel found that diverting $2.5 billion Congress had appropriated for the military violated the Constitution and is unlawful.
The full ruling from the 9th Circuit in Sierra Club v. Trump is online here (pdf). Note, the dissent in the case was written by Judge Daniel P. Collins — a Trump appointee — while the majority were judges chosen for the bench by Bill Clinton.
The executive branch “lacked independent constitutional authority to authorize the transfer of funds,” Judge Sidney R. Thomas wrote for the majority. “These funds were appropriated for other purposes, and the transfer amounted to ‘drawing funds from the Treasury without authorization by statute and thus violating the Appropriations Clause.’ Therefore, the transfer of funds here was unlawful.”
The same ruling noted that Trump “has long supported the construction of a border wall on the southern border between the United States and Mexico. Since the President took office in 2017, however, Congress has repeatedly declined to provide the amount of funding requested by the President.”








