San Antonio Express-News

Abbott, Patrick are largely silent as drama unfolds on Texas border

- By Andrea Zelinski

AUSTIN — Gov. Greg Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick frequently talk tough about illegal immigratio­n, but they refuse to publicly support the Trump administra­tion’s “zero-tolerance” policy that’s spurred outrage for separating thousands of undocument­ed children from their parents.

But neither are they criticizin­g it.

Texas’ top Republican­s are making a calculated decision to stay out of the humanitari­an crisis on the border, even though it’s unfolding on Texas soil, apparently because they don’t want to upset their political base.

The governor has said little about the White House policy, making only one public comment backing President Donald

Trump’s argument that the children’s and parents’ traumatic experience­s can be used as leverage for an immigratio­n overhaul.

“This is horrible and this rips everyone’s hearts apart about what’s going on,” Abbott told a Dallasarea TV station.

He added that Trump had offered to “end the ripping apart of these families” if Democrats agree to a new immigratio­n law.

Abbott declined repeated requests for comment. Instead, his staff forwarded the statement made last weekend to NBC TV.

“It shouldn't be a tightrope to do the right thing,” said John Weaver, a longtime campaign strategist from Texas who has consulted for Republican­s such as George H.W. Bush and now Ohio Gov. John Kasich. “It’s disappoint­ing that we haven’t heard from the governor but not surprising. We’ve gone from Texas having very strong leaders to having leaders who are very calculatin­g.” Some 2,000 minors who crossed the border illegally have been separated from their parents in the past six weeks due to a “zero tolerance” policy announced by Attorney General Jeff Sessions in April.

Many children have been sent to a tent camp in Tornillo and a former Walmart in Brownsvill­e, among other places, before being released to family or sent into federal foster care, unsure if or when they will reunite with their parents.

Patrick never brought up the separation policy or the border when he spoke for half an hour Friday at the Texas Republican Party convention in San Antonio. His office and campaign have not returned repeated calls for comment.

“Dan Patrick’s silence, in the face of such brutality committed on Texas soil, makes him as culpable as the administra­tion. Morally, it’s as though he wrenched the children from their parents with his own hands,” said Mike Collier, a Democratic businessma­n running against Patrick for lieutenant governor in November.

The Trump administra­tion has defended the policy and urged Congress, namely Democrats, to fix the problem.

Two-thirds of Americans disapprove of the administra­tion’s decision to remove immigrant children from their parents after crossing the border, according to a poll by CNN.

However, the majority of Republican­s surveyed — 58 percent — approve of the practice. The poll surveyed 1,012 people between June 14 and 17.

Attorney General Ken Paxton, a tea party Republican and attorney for a state with a 1,254-mile border with Mexico, backs the administra­tion’s attempt to force passage of Trump’s immigratio­n priorities.

“The separation of families should never be a desired outcome and my heart goes out to these children being used as ‘pawns’ in a political debate. The issue is whether we’ll have a secure border or an open border,” he said in an emailed statement Tuesday. “Any changes to our immigratio­n system to address family separation must come from Congress.”

House Speaker Joe Straus, often at odds with his party’s conservati­ve base, is one of the few Republican­s who has pushed back against the White House.

On Tuesday, he lambasted the “zero tolerance” policy in a letter to the president, accusing him of using “these scared, vulnerable children as a negotiatin­g tool.”

He urged Trump to listen to faith leaders and elected officials from both parties and rescind the policy, stressing the trauma the children is going through is scientific­ally proven to lead to poor health outcomes, anxiety, delayed developmen­t and mental illness, “worsening the many problems that already plague our immigratio­n system.”

Straus is among a growing group of Republican­s speaking out, including U.S. Rep. Will Hurd of San Antonio and former first lady Laura Bush who called the policy “cruel” and “immoral,” adding that “it breaks my heart.”

Hurd is in a highly competitiv­e race against Democrat Gina OrtizJones in a district that is majority Hispanic.

Donald Trump Jr. pulled out of attending a fundraiser for Land Commission­er George P. Bush after Bush’s father, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, lashed out at the Trump administra­tion’s handling of the border.

“Children shouldn’t be used as a negotiatin­g tool,” said the elder Bush, “@realDonald­Trump should end his heartless policy and Congress should get an immigratio­n deal done that provides for asylum reform, border security and path to citizenshi­p for Dreamers.”

Images of children in holding cells have spurred the outrage outside of the Republican party base on which Abbott and others rely on for support.

“If I were Greg Abbott’s political adviser, I’d say just keep your mouth shut and do something else and stay out of the limelight, stay out of the news as much as you can,” said Victoria DeFrancesc­o Soto, a lecturer with a focus on politics and immigratio­n at the University of Texas at Austin.

 ?? Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press ?? President Donald Trump walks with House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California as he leaves the Capitol after meeting with GOP leadership.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press President Donald Trump walks with House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California as he leaves the Capitol after meeting with GOP leadership.
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Abbott
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Patrick
 ?? Jerry Lara / San Antonio Express-News ?? Hondurans Jeny Patricia Figueroa Fernandez, 27, and daughter Dolores, 3, wait as Border Patrol Agent Christian Alvarez interviews other migrants.
Jerry Lara / San Antonio Express-News Hondurans Jeny Patricia Figueroa Fernandez, 27, and daughter Dolores, 3, wait as Border Patrol Agent Christian Alvarez interviews other migrants.

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