N.M. governor defends pulling Guard troops from border, says there’s no ‘real emergency’

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New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham defended Sunday her decision to defy the Trump administration by pulling National Guard troops along her state’s border with Mexico, insisting there was no “real emergency.”

“As everyone ought to be doing, I was on the border, and I’m looking and assessing whether or not there’s a real emergency or a crisis, and there isn’t,” Ms. Grisham told CBS’s “Face the Nation. “And the reality is these troops need to be available when there is a serious issue or an emergency to deal with.”

The Democratic governor issued a Feb. 5 order withdrawing most of the 118 National Guard troops stationed along New Mexico’s border, although she kept some in place to provide humanitarian assistance.

“I did place some National Guard, law enforcement and most importantly, health responders to an area where they’re forcing them to come across a really desolate area in the southern part of the state,” she said.

New Mexico is one of 16 states that filed suit last week to stop President Trump’s Feb. 15 national-emergency declaration on border security, arguing that federal funding appropriated to the states could be at risk.

Oregon Gov. Jay Inslee said “we feel good about our chances to succeed.”

“We do not have a national security emergency. Donald Trump has a political emergency,” Mr. Inslee said. “He was unable to get Mexico to pay for his wall. He does not have the support of either party and the entire U.S. Congress on a bipartisan basis has told him his wall is a colossal mistake. He ought to be responding to real emergencies like the forest fires.”

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