Congress challenged by funding emergency at the border
WASHINGTON — Congress has only a few weeks to advance an emergency funding bill to deal with the escalating humanitarian crisis at the southern border, creating a time crunch that has lawmakers on all sides alarmed.
Money to care for Central American migrants arriving in the U.S. to claim asylum runs out in just a few weeks, and every day seems to bring new evidence that the government’s response is inadequate and that conditions for many migrants are unacceptable.
“We’re not taking care of things and it’s very, very serious,” said Rep. Kay Granger of Texas, the top Republican on the Appropriations Committee. “Partisan politics need to be put away on this thing. I mean, we’ve got a crisis on our border, and anyone who doesn’t understand that has not seen what’s happening.”
President Donald Trump’s $4.5 billion emergency border request, issued last month, was dropped from a widely popular disaster aid bill in end-stage negotiations that foundered over conditions Democrats sought to place on delivery of the border aid. The episode stoked hard feelings on the bipartisan panel. The disaster aid bill passed, but the border funding package faces a challenging path, especially since Trump’s trade battles with Mexico are also part of the equation, along with the distraction of a possible impeachment inquiry.