President Donald Trump said Wednesday that his administration would begin work on a section of his promised U.S.-Mexico border wall in San Diego County, at the county's request.
"San Diego has asked us to go forward with their section of the wall in California, and rather than not doing that and letting them lobby for us with Governor [Jerry] Brown, we decided to do it," Trump told reporters as his Cabinet met at the White house.
State legislators and Brown, California's Democratic governor, have been hostile toward Trump's plan to make the border nearly impervious for immigrants coming to the United States illegally, but some enclaves have disagreed.
The Board of Supervisors for San Diego, which is California's second most populous county and sits on the border with Mexico, in April voted to support Trump's legal challenge to the state designating itself a "sanctuary state" hospitable to immigrants.