An appeals court on Wednesday upheld a freeze on Pentagon money to build a border wall with Mexico, casting doubt on President Donald Trump’s ability to make good on a signature campaign promise before the 2020 election. 
 
A divided three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco agreed with a lower-court ruling that prevented the government from tapping Defense Department counterdrug money to build high-priority sections of wall in Arizona and New Mexico. 
 
The decision is a setback for Trump’s ambitious plans. He ended a 35-day government shutdown in February after Congress gave him far less than he wanted. He then declared a national emergency that the White House said would free billions of dollars from the Pentagon. 
 
The case may still be considered, but the administration cannot build during the legal challenge.  
 
A freeze imposed by U.S. District Judge Haywood Gilliam Jr. of Oakland in May prevented work on two Pentagon-funded wall contracts — one spanning 46 miles (74 kilometers) in New Mexico and another covering 5 miles (8 kilometers) in Yuma, Ariz.   
 
While the order applied only to those first-in-line projects, Gilliam made clear that he felt the American Civil Liberties Union and other groups were likely to prevail at trial in their argument that the president was ignoring lawmakers’ wishes by diverting Defense Department money.  
 

FILE – Construction crews install new border wall sections, Jan. 9, 2019, seen from Tijuana, Mexico.

“Congress’s `absolute’ control over federal expenditures — even when that control may frustrate the desires of the Executive Branch regarding initiatives it views as important — is not a bug in our constitutional system. It is a feature of that system, and an essential one,” the judge wrote.  

Another step
 
Gilliam went a step further Friday by ruling definitively that the administration couldn’t use Pentagon counterdrug money for the two projects covered in his May order or to replace 63 miles (101 kilometers) in the Border Patrol’s Tucson, Ariz., sector and 15 miles (24 kilometers) in its El Centro, Calif., sector.  
 
Trump immediately vowed to appeal. 
 
At stake is billions of dollars that would allow Trump to make progress on a major 2016 campaign promise heading into his race for a second term. 
 
Trump declared a national emergency after losing a fight with the Democratic-led House that led to the 35-day shutdown. Congress agreed to spend nearly $1.4 billion on barriers in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley, the busiest corridor for illegal crossings, which was well below the $5.7 billion the president requested. 
 
Trump grudgingly accepted the money but declared the emergency to siphon money from other government accounts, finding up to $8.1 billion for wall construction. The money includes $3.6 billion from military construction funds, $2.5 billion from Defense Department counterdrug activities and $600 million from the Treasury Department’s asset forfeiture fund. 
 
Acting Defense Secretary Mark Esper has yet to approve transferring the military construction funds. The Treasury Department funds have so far survived legal challenges. 
 
The president’s adversaries say the emergency declaration was an illegal attempt to ignore Congress. The ACLU sued on behalf of the Sierra Club and the Southern Border Communities Coalition.  

No mention of immigration
 
The administration said the U.S. needed emergency protection to fight drug smuggling. Its arguments did not mention illegal immigration or unprecedented numbers of Central American families seeking asylum at the U.S. border, which have dominated public attention in recent months. 
 
Justice Department attorneys argued that the freeze on Pentagon funds showed a “fundamental misunderstanding of the federal appropriations process.” 
 
“The real separation-of-powers concern is the district court’s intrusion into the budgeting process,” they wrote. 
 
The two sides argued before a three-judge panel in San Francisco on June 20, made up of Barack Obama appointee Michelle Friedland and George W. Bush appointees N. Randy Smith and Richard Clifton. 
 

FILE – A Customs and Border Control agent patrols on the U.S. side of a razor-wire-covered border wall along the Mexico border east of Nogales, Ariz., March 2, 2019.

The administration has awarded $2.8 billion in contracts for barriers covering 247 miles (390 kilometers), with all but 17 miles (27 kilometers) of that to replace existing barriers, not expand coverage. It is preparing for a flurry of construction that the president is already celebrating at campaign-style rallies. 
 
Trump inherited barriers spanning 654 miles (1,046 kilometers), or about one-third of the border with Mexico. Of the miles covered under Trump-awarded contracts, more than half is with Pentagon money. 
 
The Army Corps of Engineers recently announced several large Pentagon-funded contacts.  
 
SLSCO Ltd. of Galveston, Texas, won a $789 million award to replace the New Mexico barrier. Southwest Valley Constructors of Albuquerque, N.M., won a $646 million award for the work in Tucson. Barnard Construction Co. of Bozeman, Mont., won a $141.8 million contract to replace barrier in Yuma and El Centro. 

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