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PolitiFact California: No, Mr. President, California Is Not ‘Begging’ For A Wall

Border Patrol Agent Tim Tucciarone
President Trump discusses border security with San Diego Border Patrol Sector Chief Patrol Agent Rodney Scott during a visit to the border wall prototypes and mockups.

PolitiFact California looks at claims made by elected officials, candidates and groups and rates them as: True, Mostly True, Half True, Mostly False, False and Pants On Fire.

During his visit to the U.S.-Mexico border near San Diego, President Donald Trump made this confounding claim: "The state of California is begging us to build walls" along the border.

Deep blue California is "begging" the federal government to build a wall? Really?

The president’s statement seemed false on its face, but we dug in for a fact check just to make sure.

Our research

Here’s Trump’s full statement made March 13, 2018:

"For the people that say 'no wall,' if you had no walls over here, you wouldn’t have a country. The state of California is begging us to build walls in certain areas. They don’t tell you that. And we said no, we won’t do it until we build the whole wall."

We asked Gov. Jerry Brown’s office about Trump’s statement. A spokesman for the governor indicated he had no idea what Trump was talking about.

"We gave up trying to translate – and fully understand – the tweets and extemporaneous thoughts of the president long ago," Evan Westrup said in an email.

Others rejected Trump’s claim outright:

Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, a candidate for governor and top Trump critic, tweeted:

"California is not "begging" you for this wall. Your wall is a waste of money and is literally impossible to complete. It will look more like a piece of swiss cheese than an insurmountable barrier. It's nothing more than a 6th century solution to a 21st century problem."

"Not exactly sure where he got that from"

Immigration and environmental experts said the state of California, at least in recent years, hasn’t expressed any desire to build a border wall.

"Not at all," said Louis DeSipio, a UC Irvine political science professor who studies immigration. "I’m not exactly sure where (Trump) got that from. Perhaps he heard it from some local sheriff who wants a wall."

"It’s been increasingly difficult to make sense of the things this administration says, and President Trump in particular," added Randy Serraglio, a spokesman for the Center for Biological Diversity.

The environmental group and state government were part of a recent lawsuit against the federal government’s plans to build the wall in California. Federal judge Gonzalo Curiel rejected their argument about environmental concerns and ruled the Trump administration could move forward on the project.

Not the first confusing claim

This is not the first time Trump has made a strange claim about California’s desire to build sections of a border wall. On Feb. 28, 2018, following the judge’s ruling, Trump tweeted:

"I have decided that sections of the Wall that California wants built NOW will not be built until the whole Wall is approved. Big victory yesterday with ruling from the courts that allows us to proceed. OUR COUNTRY MUST HAVE BORDER SECURITY!"

National news outlets attempted to make sense of that tweet, without success.

A Politico articleassessed the tweet this way: "It was not clear what Trump meant in suggesting that "California wants" a border wall "now," since the state opposed his administration’s efforts. White House spokespeople did not immediately return emails seeking further clarity regarding the president’s post and whether the administration intends to delay work in California even after securing a judicial victory."

We found an interview with one top California Democrat, Attorney General Xavier Beccera, indicating he could support a barrier at the border, but no statements where top leaders are "begging" for a wall.

Becerra told the Los Angeles Times in September 2017 that he supports "doing what our experts tell us we should do" on border security, whether that includes a physical barrier, more troops on the ground or virtual enforcement through aerial detection or surveillance.

On the day of Trump’s California visit, Becerra was stronger in his response to Trump. He told Fox News, "We’ve always called for border security on a bipartisan basis, but building walls, that’s a medieval technology that really doesn’t have a place in the 21st century"

Perhaps Trump meant Californians, and not their state government, want the wall? But even in that case, the president is wrong. A September 2017 survey showed 68 percent of likely voters in the state oppose building a wall along the entire southern border.

The White House did not respond to a request for evidence supporting Trump’s statement.

Our ruling

President Trump claimed "the state of California is begging us to build walls in certain areas," along the border. "They don’t tell you that."

There’s no evidence backing up the president’s mystifying statement. If anything, California and its Democratic leaders are some of the strongest opponents of Trump’s border wall, at least as he’s promoted it.

Some state leaders rejected Trump’s claim outright while others said they had no idea what he was talking about.

We rated Trump’s claim Pants On Fire!

PANTS ON FIRE – The statement is not accurate and makes a ridiculous claim.

Click here for more on the six PolitiFact ratings and how we select facts to check.

PolitiFact California is fact-checking claims in the 2018 governor's race. Hear a claim you want fact-checked? Email us at politifactca@capradio.org, tweet us @CAPolitiFact or contact us on Facebook.