Murray blasts Trump’s decision to divert military funds to border wall

$3.6 billion to help pay for wall

U.S. Sen. Patty Murray/Courtesy Photo

U.S. Sen. Patty Murray/Courtesy Photo

U.S. Senator Patty Murray, D-Wash., a senior member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, on Thursday in Congress denounced President Trump’s decision to divert $3.6 billion for critical military construction projects in Washington state and across the country to instead fund construction of what she said is his wasteful wall on the southern U.S. border.

As a result of this callous and alarming move, Murray said, military construction priorities that Congress had already funded—including $88.9 million for a vital pier and maintenance facility at Naval Base Kitsap—have been deferred indefinitely, making Washington state one of the areas most impacted by this executive overreach, according to a Murray news release. Additionally, federal investments in other priorities for our military, including investments to fund schools and child care facilities for military families, were also ransacked to pay for Trump’s border wall.

“The Pentagon’s announcement this week that it plans to move billions—billions—of dollars away from critical military construction projects across our country is more than a broken promise to our troops, it is an egregious abuse of power that undercuts Congress’ constitutional obligation to set our nation’s budget, and it compromises critical national security priorities,” Murray said in remarks on the Senate floor.

Murray said the deeply disturbing move by the Trump Administration directly undercuts Congress’ authority to appropriate and allocate federal funds, spurred by President Trump’s absurd and manufactured national emergency declaration, and comes despite the President’s promise on the campaign trail that Mexico would pay for a border wall.

In addition to flouting the Congressional budget process, Trump’s decision undermines military readiness and compromises national security, Murray said. In Washington state specifically, the pier and maintenance facility project at Naval Base Kitsap would provide vital protection for the Navy’s Trident ballistic missile submarines. In other states, the lost funding will affect the construction of military schools and child care facilities as well as critical defense infrastructure, negatively impacting military families and their communities.

A vocal opponent of she calls Trump’s anti-immigrant agenda, Murray has been a staunch opponent of Trump’s border wall and his accompanying national emergency declaration, introducing a bill in February to prevent the president from taking future action to raid federal coffers to fund his border wall.


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website https://www.kentreporter.com/submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

More in Northwest

t
Suspect in violent Renton stabbing posts bail

K’Shawn Konscience Jimerson, 19, was charged in the death of 65-year-old Michael Dean Gray.

t
Man killed in Auburn motorcycle crash on SR 167

Collision Tuesday afternoon, Oct. 1 southbound near Highway 18

t
Man dies while in Federal Way Police Department custody

Valley Independent Investigative Team will conduct an investigation.

t
Man, 19, arrested in stabbing death of handyman in Renton

King County Medical Examiner’s Office identified 65-year-old Kyle Dean Gray’s death as a homicide

t
Renton High School staff receive Governor’s Lifesaving Award

The staff members all worked together with school nurse last year to save the life of a 10th-grade boy.

A group of volunteers from Raise the Wage Renton, shown gathering signatures in 2023. Renton residents approved a higher minimum wage for the city in a Feb. 2024 special election. (Photo courtesy of Raise the Wage Renton)
Minimum wage is going up in Washington

Cities can set minimum wages higher than the state. Seattle, SeaTac, Tukwila, Renton, Bellingham and Burien all will have higher wages in 2025.

File photo
Fewer Washington residents have delinquent debt than national average

About 14% of Washington residents carry delinquent debt, lower than the national… Continue reading

t
Meet James Mitchell Renton High School’s new school resource officer

‘When these kids know that we care, that people care about them, they want to do better’

t
Wild Waves Theme Park in Federal Way offers a 24-hour coffin challenge

Six participants must stay inside a coffin for 24 hours for the chance to win prizes.

Demolition has begun on the Auburn Avenue Theater, with the main marquee among the things coming down first. Courtesy photo
Auburn Avenue Theater’s marquee comes down

Built in 1926; city plans new theater complex

t
Man, 41, charged in Auburn drive-by shooting

To be arraigned Oct. 3; incident left man in critical condition

Republican Jaime Herrera Beutler, left, and Democrat Dave Upthegrove, right, are competing in the 2024 Washington state lands commissioner race. (Photos courtesy of campaigns)
WA lands commissioner debate: Herrera Beutler and Upthegrove square off

The candidates disagreed on land management and timber strategies as they compete for the job of running the state agency that oversees millions of acres of public land.