Once there, he is expected to meet with Border Patrol officials who are being forced to work without pay because of the president’s impasse with Democrats in Congress who have refused to accede to his demand for funding for a border wall.
But as the government shutdown neared the end of its third week, the president was scheduled to board Air Force One to head to Texas with no additional negotiations scheduled with congressional leaders.
The president held a brief and contentious negotiation with Democrats and Republican leaders Wednesday in the Situation Room that ended abruptly when he stormed out of the room after Speaker Nancy Pelosi rebuffed his overture to reopen the government in exchange for wall funding. Pelosi and Democrats have consistently said that they would be willing to negotiate border security issues with him if he would reopen the government, even as Pelosi has held firm to the position that she does not support funding for a barrier wall.
In a meeting with network anchors Tuesday before his address to the nation, the president dismissed his trip to McAllen, a border community where crime is near a 30-year low, as a “photo op” that he was doing because his top communications advisers counseled him to do.
The president has said he has reserved the option of declaring a national emergency to fund construction for the wall, perhaps the central promise that he made to his political base during his campaign, and bypassing a legislative solution.
The White House counsel, Pat Cipollone, is to accompany the president to Texas, according to a White House official who declined to be identified to discuss internal matters. Cipollone would be among those who would presumably provide a legal rationale should Trump declare an emergency.
If the president were to declare a national emergency, which some legal experts say is within his authority, it is sure to stoke debate in Congress, and almost certainly will invite a legal challenge in the courts.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.