https://thefederalist.com/2019/03/26...ress-ignoring/
Trump Is Right: Our Border Is In Crisis, And Congress Is Ignoring It
After promising again and again to stop  illegal immigration, cartel violence, and the drug epidemic, members of  Congress are complaining that Donald Trump is now taking action. 
                                                                                                                                                                                        
  By 
Scott DesJarlais 
March 26, 2019
                                                                                    
                                                                                 Since the National Emergencies Act became law in 1976, U.S.  presidents have declared more than 50 emergencies. More than 30 are  ongoing. In the past, presidents of both parties have used their  emergency powers to reallocate federal funds, reassign government employees, and build infrastructure to protect Americans from terrorist attacks, weapons of mass destruction, and drug cartels.
Our country has been in a continuous state of emergency for nearly four decades, not that Congress ever noticed.  Not once has Congress reviewed a single declaration in a timely manner,  as the law requires. Not a single time have members, who routinely vote  to fund all sorts of unauthorized, constitutionally questionable  federal programs, voted to terminate one of these declarations.
Congress  originally granted presidents broad authority to  declare emergencies undefined in legislation because emergencies are  unpredictable by nature. As our Founders understood, the idea that  Congress should forever deliberate over a possible military action could  leave our country defenseless in the face of immediate danger.
Also, constitutionally speaking, the presidency has inherent power to  direct the military, the main purpose of which is to defend U.S.  territory. If foreign adversaries were to suddenly attack Texas or  California, is there any doubt the commander-in-chief should have the  power to act without committee hearings first?
Finally, Congress has never voted to disapprove an emergency  declaration, because the most political branch of government prefers to  delay or deny its responsibilities and grouse later. After promising  again and again to stop illegal immigration, cartel violence, and the  drug epidemic, and failing to close any legal loophole or the porous  border causing these deadly problems, members are complaining that  Donald Trump is now taking action.
Like millions of Americans across the political spectrum, who elected  the outsider to the White House, he took our long-stated positions  seriously. The difference is that President Trump, rather than searching  for excuses, is finally doing something about our country’s number-one  national security threat, with little help from establishment  Washington.
Sadly, high-paid professionals who make their living in The Swamp  see economic opportunity in an endless pool of foreign labor and  potential amnesty for illegal aliens, while heroin, fentanyl, and  other drugs from Mexico are killing tens of thousands of mostly  working- and middle-class Americans every year.
International cartels and other violent gangs, such as MS-13, that  control the flow of drugs and human beings into the United States have  murdered many more. In Mexico itself, the Sinaloa Cartel, Los Zetas, and  others have probably claimed hundreds of thousands of lives, but the full scope of slaughter across Central and South America is difficult to quantify.
Despite misleading media coverage, it has become clear that foreign  adversaries really are attacking our southern border. China, Russia,  Iran, Venezuela, and Cuba, to name a few determined enemies, have joined  forces to spread their malign influence across the region, threatening  our allies and Americans’ safety here at home. The role of Chinese drug manufacturers, supplying Mexican cartels with fentanyl,  a synthetic opioid many times more powerful than heroin, and  responsible for an increasing number of overdose deaths, is just one  example.
The communist state’s tolerance for narco-trafficking could be part  of a larger strategy that defense experts have described to the House  Armed Services Committee, on which I serve. For instance, China supports  the socialist Maduro regime in Venezuela. U.S. prosecutors have indicted its leaders on serious drug trafficking charges. Cuba, also a communist dictatorship, is a Caribbean drug depot and enforcer for the regime. So are Cuban-funded terrorist organizations FARC and ELN.
Russian  and Iranian forces, including Iran’s infamous Revolutionary Guard  Corps, are assisting Nicholas Maduro’s crackdown on dissent. This  wide-reaching network of drug-traffickers, human smugglers, terrorists,  corrupt governments, and left-wing radicals extends to America’s  doorstep. In one notorious plot, Iranian-backed terror group Hezbollah hired a cartel hitman to assassinate a foreign ambassador in Washington.
The connection between the Islamic Republic and Mexican cartels is  even more insidious. A Drug Enforcement Administration investigation  revealed that they conspire to traffic drugs and arms, and launder the proceeds to wreak more havoc. Profits from human smuggling, otherwise known as illegal immigration, fill cartel coffers.
Reports that Venezuela and Cuba have helped to organize recent migrant caravans should  be reason enough to secure the southern border. That sophisticated  cartels aligned with the world’s worst dictators and terrorists have corrupted top levels of the Mexican government should  close the case to build more border barriers. Yet willful ignorance  pervades most media coverage, reflecting the liberal open-borders  agenda, really a collection of crass commercial and political interests  dressed up as utopian fantasy.
With all due respect to a few of my colleagues, Congress has already  appropriated substantial funding in previous legislation, permitted its  reallocation on frequent occasions, and granted the president authority  to do so in case of an emergency like the one we confront at the  southern border. The partisan debate over whether a wall will work ended  when nearly every congressional Democrat voted to send the president  $1.4 billion for construction costs.
All  that remains is to finish the job, a foreign concept in Washington. The  absence of tanks and artillery along the Rio Grande should comfort no  one. Nor should the methodical pace at which our adversaries have  advanced in Latin America, nor Congress’ reluctance to act. We have a  president, in particular President Trump, for moments like this that  call for decisive action in the interest of national security.
                         
Rep. Scott DesJarlais, a physician,  represents Tennessee’s Fourth District in Congress. He is a member of  the House Armed Services Committee, as well as the Border Security  Caucus, and chairs the Congressional Range and Testing Center Caucus,  working to maintain the U.S. military’s advantage in air and space.
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