Shropshire Star

Trump seeks 18 billion US dollars to extend border wall over 10 years

Mexico has steadfastly rejected Mr Trump’s demand that it pay for the wall.

Published
A Border Patrol agent walks along a wall in California (Gregory Bull/AP)

The Trump administration has proposed spending 18 billion dollars (£13.2 billion) over 10 years to significantly extend the border wall with Mexico, providing one of its most detailed blueprints of how the president hopes to carry out a signature campaign pledge.

The proposal by Customs and Border Protection calls for 316 miles (505 kilometres) of additional barrier by September 2027, bringing total coverage to 970 miles (1,552 kilometres), or nearly half the border, according to a US official.

It also calls for 407 miles (651 kilometres) of replacement or secondary fencing.

Mr Trump promised “a big, beautiful wall” with Mexico as a centrepiece of his presidency but offered few details of where it would be built, when and at what cost.

His administration asked for 1.6 billion dollars (£1.2bn) this year to build or replace 74 miles (118 kilometres) of fencing in Texas and California, and officials have said they also will seek the same amount next year.

The 10-year plan, first reported by The Wall Street Journal, resulted from discussions with senators who asked the agency what it would take to secure the border, the official said.

It comes as the administration intensifies negotiations in Congress on a package that may include granting legal status to about 800,000 people who were temporarily shielded from deportation under an Obama-era program, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals.

Mr Trump said last year that he was ending the program but gave Congress until March to deliver a legislative fix.

The plan on border security came in response to a request by US Senator Jeff Flake, said Jason Samuels, a spokesman for the Arizona Republican.

An administration official confirmed the document was prepared at the request of congressional negotiators and said funding for the wall and other security measures must be part of any legislative package on immigration.

Prototypes of border planned walls have been constructed in San Diego (Elliott Spagat/AP)
Prototypes of border planned walls have been constructed in San Diego (Elliott Spagat/AP)

Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said the wall would be “first and foremost” in any package that includes new protections for DACA recipients.

She also said the administration wanted to close “loopholes” on issues that include handling asylum claims and local police working with immigration authorities.

Nielsen called the 3.2 billion dollar (£2.3bn) requests for fencing during the administration’s first two years a down payment.

“This is not going to get us the whole wall we need, but it’s a start,” she said.

Mexico has steadfastly rejected Mr Trump’s demand that it pay for the wall and few doubt that US taxpayers will foot the bill if the wall is built.

The Customs and Border Protection document calls for a total of 33 billion dollars (£24.3bn) in new border spending, including 18 billion (£13.2bn) for the wall, 5.7 billion (£4.2bn) for technology gear, 1 billion (£0.7bn) for road construction and maintenance and 8.5 billion (£6.3bn) for 5,000 new Border Patrol agents, 2,500 border inspectors and other personnel, the official said.

The document doesn’t specify where the extended wall should be built.

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