The Guardian (USA)

Texas governor’s plans to bus migrants to Capitol met with bipartisan criticism

- Oliver Laughland

Plans announced by Texas governor Greg Abbott that attempt to send undocument­ed migrants away from the southern border on buses to Washington were met with bipartisan criticism on Wednesday.

Abbott, a Republican, told reporters that the state would respond to the Biden administra­tion’s decision to rescind a hardline Trump-era immigratio­n policy by placing state troopers in riot gear at the border and then putting migrants on buses bound for DC.

But shortly after his press conference announcing the new policy, the governor issued a release that significan­tly softened the plan, clarifying that any transporta­tion out of the state would be done voluntaril­y and only after an individual had been processed by the Department of Homeland security for release into the US.

The plans also includes measures to begin “enhanced safety inspection­s” of commercial vehicles coming across the Texas border with Mexico, which the governor acknowledg­ed would “dramatical­ly slow” traffic at the border.

The botched announceme­nt came after the Biden administra­tion last week said it would rescind Title 42 restrictio­ns at the southern border. The policy, introduced by the Trump administra­tion, allowed border officials the power to remove undocument­ed migrants under public health guidance before they could claim asylum. 1.7 million people had been removed from the US under the program, the majority under the Biden administra­tion.

The Center for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC] announced the policy would end on 23 May as the White House plans for an increase in irregular arrivals at the border.

On Wednesday, Democrats and Republican­s condemned Abbott’s announceme­nt.

Beto O’Rourke, the former Democratic US congressma­n, who is running for Texas governor this year as Abbott faces re-election, described the announceme­nt as a “political stunt”.

“If Abbott focused on solutions instead of stunts, then Texas could have made some real progress on this issue over the last seven years,” O’Rourke said in a statement.

In a statement reported by the Texas Tribune, ACLU of Texas staff attorney Kate Huddleston said: “Any forcible busing of migrants across the country would be outrageous and blatantly unconstitu­tional. Given that Abbott cannot dictate where people are sent, he has already backpedale­d on this heinous plan, announcing that it will be only voluntary.”

Meanwhile, Texas Republican state representa­tive Matt Schaefer called the announceme­nt “a gimmick” in a post on social media.

 ?? Photograph: Joel Martinez/AP ?? Texas Governor Greg Abbott speaks during a press conference at the Texas Department of Public Safety Weslaco regional office on Wednesday.
Photograph: Joel Martinez/AP Texas Governor Greg Abbott speaks during a press conference at the Texas Department of Public Safety Weslaco regional office on Wednesday.

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