Congress’ recent spending package includes some funding for border security, but as NBC News noted after the measure became law, the money “can be used only to repair and build previously approved fencing,” It’s an important detail: Donald Trump may like to pretend he’s fulfilling his dream of constructing a giant border wall, but putting barriers where barriers already exist is hardly what he promised.
A recent Washington Post report added: “The barriers authorized to be built under the act must be ‘operationally effective designs’ already deployed as of last March, meaning none of President Trump’s big, beautiful wall prototypes can be built.”
It therefore came as something of a surprise yesterday when Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen told reporters that repairing and building previously approved fencing should be perceived as new wall construction. “To us, it’s all new wall,” she argued, adding, “This is the Trump border wall.”
We’ve apparently reached the it-depends-on-the-meaning-of-“new” phrae of the debate.
At the same White House briefing, the cabinet secretary was asked why the administration is dispatching National Guard troops to the border now, since there’s no obvious need. It led to this exchange:
Q: I was wondering, I’m not sure I understand what the urgency for this is. It seemed like it ramped up, you know, just over the last several days and since the weekend, in fact. The House is not here; the Senate is not here. Why is this such an urgent priority right now for the President to sign?









