Donald Trump

Gov. Brown: Proposed Border Wall ‘Too Much' Like Berlin Wall

"It reminds me too much of the Berlin Wall," Gov. Jerry Brown said of the proposed border wall.

California Gov. Jerry Brown likened President Donald Trump to a strongman whose goal of walling off the U.S.-Mexico border conjures other infamous barriers from the past.

"The wall, to me, is ominous. It reminds me too much of the Berlin Wall," Brown said during an interview broadcast Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press."

The pointed reference suggested that the president was, like the leaders of communist East Germany several decades ago, trying to restrict the movements of people on both sides, despite all they have in common.

"There's a lot of odor here of kind of a strongman," Brown told host Chuck Todd. "I think Americans ought to be very careful when we make radical changes like a 30-foot wall keeping some in and some out."

Trump made extending the walls that line parts of the nearly 2,000-mile border a central campaign pledge. Companies seeking to build the wall must soon submit concept papers for sloped barriers that are aesthetically pleasing on the U.S. side. It's still not clear how the administration would pay for the wall.

Brown said that although California would fight "very hard" against the wall, people should not expect a series of knee-jerk lawsuits.

"We'll be strategic. And we'll do the right human, and I would even say Christian, thing from my point of view," Brown said. "You don't treat human beings like that."

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In this June 13, 2013 file photo, US Border Patrol agent Jerry Conlin looks out over Tijuana, Mexico, along the old border wall along the US - Mexico border, where it ends at the base of a hill in San Diego.
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An image of the U.S.-Mexico border captured by NBC 7 in February 2017.
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The US-Mexico border, as seen from San Diego, California in an image from NBC 7 in February 2017.
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The end of the fence along the U.S.-Mexico border as it reaches into the Pacific Ocean south of San Diego.
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A U.S. Customs and Border Protection K-9 unit waits to check vehicles crossing into the United States from Mexico on September 23, 2016 in San Ysidro, California. Dogs like this are used at the checkpoints along I-5, I-8 and I-15.
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The U.S. Mexico border is seen looking West between San Ysidro, CA and Tijuana, Mexico on June 29, 2006 in Otay Mesa, California.
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In this file photo, National Guardsmen stand in formation along the U.S.-Mexico border during a visit by California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger August 18, 2010 in San Ysidro, California.
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The San Ysidro Port of Entry at the U.S.-Mexico border at night.
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The pedestrian foot bridge the spans the San Ysidro Port of Entry south of San Diego, north of Tijuana.
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Dusk falls over a section of the US-Mexico border fence between the US (foreground) and Mexico October 8, 2006 near Campo, California.
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Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders near the U.S.-Mexico international border in Nogales, Ariz., Saturday, March 19, 2016.
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Mexican police watch from the Mexican side of the U.S.-Mexico border fence during a special 'Mass on the Border' on April 1, 2014 in Nogales, Arizona.
The area north of the U.S.-Mexico border wall that's currently in place south of San Diego. This image was captured in February 2017.
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A deportee in Mexico speaks through the U.S.-Mexico border fence to loved ones on the American side on Sept. 25, 2016, in Tijuana, Mexico. U.S. Border Patrol agents allow people into "Friendship Park" on the San Diego side of the border to meet through the fence with family and friends on the Mexican side on weekends. The park is one of the few places on the 2,000-mile border where families, many of them separated by deportations, are allowed to meet.
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The border fence across the beach and into the ocean
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Hector Gomez (R) and a brother shake hands using their fingers through a U.S./Mexico border fence at Border State Park February 1, 2003 west of San Ysidro, California. It is the only physical contact the men have had for sixteen years.

The governor disputed Trump's suggestion that immigration was a threat, casting it instead as an asset.

"Look around at many of our industries," he said, citing the state's multi-billion dollar agricultural sector and the technological hotbed of Silicon Valley. "Twenty-five percent of the people in California were foreign-born. This is our dynamism."

Brown, who visited the nation's capital last week to meet with federal officials, said he's willing to work with Trump and other Republicans on issues including immigration, health care and, especially, infrastructure.

He called a proposed rail project aimed at relieving traffic congestion between San Francisco and Silicon Valley "a real test" for the president. The plan is opposed by Republicans in California, the governor said.

"Here's a chance for President Trump to be above the political game. This is about infrastructure," Brown said. "Does he believe in a shovel-ready construction project that will create American jobs ... (and) ... is ready to go within a couple of months, or not?"

Asked what Trump could learn from Brown's predecessor, former Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, he said the president could be better at picking his battles.

"Don't fight everybody," Brown advised Trump. "And you have to make more allies than enemies. It's simple. Politics is about addition, not subtraction."

Brown, who is in his fourth non-consecutive gubernatorial term and will turn 79 next month, said the role of national Democratic Party leader was open for the taking. But it won't be him, the governor said, because "I've run for every office and there's no more left."

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