President Donald Trump visited the $147-million border wall replacement project in Otay Mesa, California, on Wednesday, and called it "amazing."
Congress' inability to override Trump's veto means that, for the time being, the national emergency declaration to build a border wall will go on as planned.
Lawmakers moved to block DoD's move to transfer $1 billion in the latest showdown over the border wall that President Trump has vowed to build.
Some of the concertina wire US troops installed on the wall between San Diego and Tijuana has reappeared on homes south of the border.
President Donald Trump declared a national emergency on Friday in order to circumvent Congress so he could secure funding for a US-Mexico border wall.
The White House announced Thursday that President Donald Trump will declare a national emergency to secure more border-wall funds.
"Am I happy at first glance? The answer is no, I'm not, I'm not happy," Trump said to reporters at the White House on Tuesday.
"And all along I felt like this might be more than a one-step process," Sen. Hoeven told INSIDER. "So this is kind of the first step."
The longest government shutdown in US history ended Friday, after Trump caved and signed a funding bill that included no money for the wall.
Conservative commentator Ann Coulter lashed out at President Donald Trump Friday, on Bill Maher's show, for signing a bill to end the government shutdown.
The longest government shutdown may be over, but its effects will be visible for months. Here are five shutdown effects that don't end with it.
President Donald Trump is expected to announce support for a plan to temporarily reopen the federal government and end the longest shutdown in history.
Federal workers miss their second paycheck in the government shutdown, as Pelosi rejects Trump's vague idea of a 'prorated' border wall down payment.
President Donald Trump's plan to secure wall funding has critics ranging from Democrats to prominent conservatives to hardline immigration hawks.
President Donald Trump is facing a tough decision: give in on the wall and help the economy or stand firm on the wall and hurt the economy.
A new nonprofit is raising money to privately build chunks of the wall. Here's how that could theoretically happen.
Rep. Will Hurd, whose district spans 800 miles of the border, said a wall is the "most expensive and least effective way to do border security."