• Re: Biden Nazi Justice Department to Sue Texas if Governor Enforces New

    From Blue Cowardice@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 29 22:24:41 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.republicans, talk.politics.guns XPost: tx.politics

    On 29 Dec 2023, DeSantis <nowomr@protonmail.com> posted some news:ummmoi$s3g1$10@dont-email.me:

    Shoot the fuckers the second they set foot in the state.

    The Department of Justice is threatening to sue Texas if its governor,
    Greg Abbott (R.), enforces a new immigration law that allows for the
    arrest and deportation of illegal immigrants, which was enacted last week.

    The legislation in question, Senate Bill 4, aims to deter thousands of
    illegal aliens from crossing the Mexico-Texas border into the U.S. by officially making illegal immigration a state crime. The law would
    function as a response to the Biden administration’s inaction regarding
    the crisis. Abbott wanted to give his state control over its own borders,
    but the Justice Department sees the law as a direct challenge to the
    federal government.

    Over 242,000 illegal immigrants tried crossing the southern border in
    November, according to the latest monthly numbers provided by U.S. Customs
    and Border Protection. That number is expected to rise for the month of December, which has seen over 250,000 migrant encounters at the southern
    border since December 1, on track to surpass the previous record of nearly 270,000 encounters in September.

    In a letter addressed to Abbott and Texas attorney general Ken Paxton (R.)
    on Thursday, DOJ official Brian Boynton argued that the federal government holds sole authority over immigration enforcement and Texas is encroaching
    upon that responsibility.

    More on
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    Immigrants
    “SB 4 is preempted and violates the United States Constitution.
    Accordingly, the United States intends to file suit to enjoin the
    enforcement of SB 4 unless Texas agrees to refrain from enforcing the
    law,” the letter states, giving Abbott and Paxton until January 3 to do
    just that.

    In response, an Abbott spokesperson said the governor anticipates taking
    the legal dispute all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court and does not
    intend to comply with the DOJ’s threat.

    Under the Court’s 2012 Arizona v. U.S. decision, no states can implement
    their own immigration laws or policies, which Boynton cites as further
    basis for the legislation’s unconstitutionality.

    “S.B. 4 therefore intrudes into a field that is occupied by the federal government and is pre-empted,” the federal official wrote. “Indeed, the
    Supreme Court has confirmed that ‘the removal process’ must be ‘entrusted
    to the discretion of the Federal Government’ because a ‘decision on removability’ touches ‘on foreign relations and must be made with one
    voice.'”

    SB 4 gives the state and local governments in Texas the authority to
    arrest illegal aliens who cross its border from Mexico between officially designated ports of entry. Under the bill, those who unlawfully cross can
    be charged with a state misdemeanor and face up to one year in prison. A
    felony charge, carrying a maximum sentence of 20 years, can be leveled if illegal immigrants are charged with additional crimes or don’t comply with
    a judge’s orders.

    The legislation also authorizes state judges to deport illegal aliens to
    Mexico if they see fit, rather than pursue prosecution under federal law.
    Last month, both the Texas senate and house passed the Republican-
    sponsored bill that is now being challenged, which is set to take effect
    on March 5.

    The formal notification of the impending lawsuit comes more than a week
    after the American Civil Liberties Union and two other progressive
    activist organizations sued Texas for the same reasons.

    Come January, the new law will further escalate tensions between Abbott
    and the Biden administration. The Texas government has claimed that the
    federal government isn’t doing enough to curtail illegal immigration,
    while the White House and Justice Department have also been actively challenging the state’s sanctioned buoy barriers and razor wire along the
    Rio Grande.

    Under a smaller operation similar to the newly signed migrant-arrest law,
    Texas has arrested over 10,000 illegal immigrants since the initiative’s
    start in July 2021. The new law will only further expand the state’s
    authority to make such arrests.

    https://www.nationalreview.com/news/justice-department-to-sue-texas-if- governor-enforces-new-border-law/

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