Albany Times Union

In Texas, a cruel and immoral plan on education

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Gov. Abbott, you have gone too far.

When you made securing the border a key public initiative and spent billions of dollars in taxpayer funds, we were reluctant to criticize you, despite questionab­le execution of your plans and thin results in return.

We agreed with you time and again that the federal government has done too little for too long to slow the flow of thousands of migrants a day across the southern border. We called for better enforcemen­t and greater resources for the humane and timely processing of asylum claims.

But we cannot accept this cruel and short-sighted suggestion that Texas should challenge long-establishe­d law that requires the state to provide a public education to unauthoriz­ed immigrant children.

You are not wrong, Governor, that the federal government should share in the cost. The burden should not fall squarely on taxpayers in border states.

But in the safe embrace of right-wing radio, where going too far is never far enough, you revealed a far more concerning thought — one that would be harmful to children, to Texas, to the United States and to the home countries that immigrants fled in fear of violence and in hope of a life not defined by threats and poverty.

You are wrong, Governor, politicall­y, legally and morally, that Texas should challenge Plyler v. Doe and attempt to upend the precedent requiring the education of unauthoriz­ed immigrant children.

Politicall­y, you wandered well outside the mainstream, where we believe most Texans will not follow you.

Legally, you failed to recognize that Justice William Brennan and a court majority were correct in their interpreta­tion of the law in Plyler that immigrant children are indeed people “in any ordinary sense of the term” and entitled to protection under the 14th Amendment.

Brennan was also right when he wrote that education plays “a fundamenta­l role in maintainin­g the fabric of our society.” It is a basic tool by which “individual­s might lead economical­ly productive lives to the benefit of us all.”

Morally, you have called on Texans to turn our backs on those who can most benefit — not only themselves but Texas and the world — from education.

We believe in a secure border. We believe in the right of nations to enforce the law when it comes to immigratio­n.

But, Governor, at long last, sir, enough is enough.

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