The Guardian (USA)

Fight over border intensifie­s as Texas governor pledges more razor wire

- Erum Salam

The fight between Texas and the federal government over the control of the US-Mexico border has further intensifie­d after state governor Greg Abbott announced he will defy the Biden administra­tion and US supreme court by ordering the installati­on of even more razor wire to deter migration.

On Monday, the supreme court voted 5-4 in favor of the federal government’s power to remove the controvers­ial concertina wire installed along stretches of the border in Texas, at Abbott’s direction. Despite this, Abbott, a hard-right Republican, is intensifyi­ng his plans to try and fence off parts of the US border with Mexico.

Federal agents were given further confirmati­on this week at the supreme court that they may remove the razor wire, as the enforcemen­t of immigratio­n law is under federal jurisdicti­on. But Abbott has argued there is nothing preventing him from ordering the Texas national guard to continue laying more razor wire down. The national guard is ultimately part of the US military, overseen by the US president as commander-in chief, but except in specific situations where the president explicitly takes federal control, the national guard in each state takes orders from its state governor.

Immigratio­n matters, as confirmed in the 2012 supreme court case Arizona v United States, officially fall under the federal government – not individual states. Abbott has repeatedly invoked the invasion clause, essentiall­y as a loophole, in the US and Texas constituti­ons, likening migrants to a public foreign enemy, which gives him the right to enforce border security and immigratio­n matters, he argues.

Fatma Marouf, a law professor and the director of the immigrant rights clinic at Texas A&M University’s School of Lawsaid Abbott’s decision to lay more wire down “seems to defy the purpose of the supreme court’s order”.

Marouf said the supreme court ruled in favor of “the federal government to continue its control of the border area.

“The briefing really focused on the need for US customs and border protection officers to access the bank of the river to save migrants. There were reports of people being caught in the wire and dying. So to continue laying the wire really undermines the purpose of the injunction.”

In Abbott’s statement released on Wednesday announcing his plan to continue going around the federal government, amid legal challenges, he accused Biden, the Democratic president, of using taxpayer dollars to “tear open” the border.

“The federal government has

broken the compact between the United States and the states. The executive branch of the United States has a constituti­onal duty to enforce those laws and has even violated them,” Abbott said.

“The result is that he has smashed records for illegal immigratio­n.”

Civil rights organizati­ons, such as the League of United Latin American Citizens (Lulac), condemned the use of razor wire and other deterrents, such as a floating barrier of buoys with nets and barbed wire in the Rio Grande, as “inhumane”.

In response to the supreme court’s ruling, Lulac national president Domingo García said: “Lulac today supports the supreme court ruling that only the federal government has jurisdicti­on over all border and immigratio­n issues. Texas Governor Abbott’s political stunts are costing millions of taxpayers’ dollars and accomplish­ing nothing to solve the humanitari­an crisis at the border.

“Not to mention the human tragedy of deaths on barbed wire walls of innocent woman and children.”

Earlier this month, a mother and her two children, from Mexico, drowned in the river near Eagle Pass – a section of the border where state officials physically blocked federal agents from accessing part of the banks of the Rio Grande. Their deaths prompted a fierce response from US homeland security spokespers­on, Luis Miranda, who said “the state of Texas should stop interferin­g with the US Border Patrol’s enforcemen­t of US law”.

The use of razor wire is part of Abbott’s publicly funded Operation Lone Star program, a joint effort between the Texas department of public safety and the Texas military department that began in 2021 to curb irregular migration. It coincided with more people crossing into the US because they were unable to claim asylum at an official crossing point or by appointmen­t. Meanwhile, tense talks continue in Washington over legislatio­n to tighten border restrictio­ns.

Marouf said Texas’s move is also “very concerning” because of its implicatio­ns on the right to seek asylum.

“We have in our immigratio­n laws guaranteed a right to seek asylum for people fleeing persecutio­n. And laying down barbed wire is the opposite of what we’re meant to do,” she said.

 ?? ?? Greg Abbott, the Texas governor, earlier this month. Photograph: Sara Diggins/AP
Greg Abbott, the Texas governor, earlier this month. Photograph: Sara Diggins/AP

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