From FAIR <[email protected]>
Subject The Real Border Crisis: Texas vs. the Constitution
Date January 29, 2024 10:40 PM
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The Real Border Crisis: Texas vs. the Constitution Ari Paul ([link removed])


The United States is on the verge of a constitutional crisis, one that enlivens the nationalist fervor of Trump America and that centers on a violent, racist closed-border policy.
NBC: Woman, 2 children die crossing Rio Grande as Border Patrol says Texas troops prevented them from intervening

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (NBC, 1/14/24 ([link removed]) ): "The only thing we are not doing is we’re not shooting people who come across the border, because, of course, the Biden administration would charge us with murder."

In January, the Supreme Court, with a five-vote majority that included both Republican and Democratic appointees, ruled that federal agents can “remove the razor wire that Texas state officials have set up along some sections of the US/Mexico border” to make immigration more dangerous (CBS, 1/23/24 ([link removed]) ). The state’s extreme border policy is not merely immoral as an idea, but has proven to be deadly and torturous in practice (USA Today, 8/3/23 ([link removed]) ; NBC, 1/14/24 ([link removed]) ; Texas Observer, 1/17/24 ([link removed]) ).

In a statement (1/22/24 ([link removed]) ), Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton decried the decision, saying that it “allows Biden to continue his illegal effort to aid the foreign invasion of America.” Paxton, a Republican, vowed that the “fight is not over, and I look forward to defending our state’s sovereignty.”

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, also a Republican, “is doubling down, blocking the agents from entering the area,” the PBS NewsHour (1/25/24 ([link removed]) ) reported. PBS quoted Abbott declaring that the state’s constitutional authority is “the supreme law of the land and supersedes any federal statutes to the contrary.”


** 'Dangerous misreading'
------------------------------------------------------------
Houston Chronicle: Greg Abbott's dangerous misreading of the U.S. Constitution

University of Texas law professor Stephen Vladeck (Houston Chronicle, 1/26/24 ([link removed]) ) observed that Abbott's position "has eerie parallels to arguments advanced by Southerners during the Antebellum era."

For a great many people, a Southern state invoking its “sovereignty” over the federal government in defense of violent and inhumane policing of non-white people sounds eerily familiar to the foundation of the nation’s first civil war. And 25 other states are supporting Texas in defying the Supreme Court (USA Today, 1/26/24 ([link removed]) ), although none of them are states that border Mexico.

Texas media are sounding the alarm about this conflict. The Texas Tribune (1/25/24 ([link removed]) ):

From the Texas House to former President Donald Trump, Republicans across the country are rallying behind Gov. Greg Abbott’s legal standoff with the federal government at the southern border, intensifying concerns about a constitutional crisis amid an ongoing dispute with the Biden administration.

Houston public media KUHF (1/24/24 ([link removed]) ) said this “could be the beginning of a constitutional crisis.” University of Texas law professor Stephen Vladeck said in an op-ed in the Houston Chronicle (1/26/24 ([link removed]) ) that Abbott’s position is a “dangerous misreading” of the Constitution.

Other legal scholars are watching with concern. Erwin Chemerinsky ([link removed]) , dean of the law school of the University of California at Berkeley, told FAIR, “I think that this is reminiscent of Southern governors disobeying the Supreme Court’s desegregation decisions.” He added, “I agree that it is a constitutional crisis in the sense that this is a challenge to a basic element of the Constitution: the supremacy of federal law over state law.”

But the New York Times has not covered the issue since the Supreme Court decision came down (1/21/24 ([link removed]) ). The AP (1/27/24 ([link removed]) ) framed the story around Donald Trump, saying the former president “lavished praise” on the governor “for not allowing the Biden administration entry to remove razor wire in a popular corridor for migrants illegally entering the US.” The Washington Post (1/26/24 ([link removed]) ) did show right-wing politicians and pundits were using the standoff to grandstand about a new civil war. NPR (1/22/24 ([link removed]) ) covered the Supreme Court case, but has fallen behind on the aftermath.


** 'MVP of border hawks'
------------------------------------------------------------
Fox: Texas governor doing 'exactly right thing' amid constitutional battle over border enforcement: legal experts

The "legal expert" quoted in Fox News' headline (1/25/24 ([link removed]) ) works for America First Legal, a group founded by white nationalist ([link removed]) Stephen Miller to "oppose ([link removed]) the radical left’s anti-jobs, anti-freedom, anti-faith, anti-borders, anti-police, and anti-American crusade."

Meanwhile, Fox News (1/25/24 ([link removed]) , 1/25/24 ([link removed]) , 1/27/24 ([link removed]) ) has given Texas extensive and favorable coverage of its feud with the White House, citing its own legal sources (from America First Legal and the Edwin Meese III Center—1/25/24 ([link removed]) ) saying that Texas was in the right and the high court was in the wrong.

Breitbart celebrated Abbott’s defiance as a states’ rights revolution, with a series of articles labeled “border showdown” (1/24/24 ([link removed]) , 1/24/24 ([link removed]) , 1/24/24 ([link removed]) , 1/25/24 ([link removed]) , 1/28/24 ([link removed]) ) and several others about Republican governors standing with Texas in solidarity (1/26/24
([link removed]) , 1/28/24 ([link removed]) ).

The white nationalist publication American Renaissance (1/25/24 ([link removed]) ) stood with Abbott but lowered the temperature, saying that it is “unclear whether this could cause a constitutional crisis, but the optics are not great for the White House in an election year.” “This will not be a ‘Civil War’ or anything close to it unless someone on the ground wildly miscalculates by firing on the Texas National Guard,” the openly racist outlet asserted. Rather, the publication saw Abbott as recentering the immigration debate as a way to weaken President Joe Biden’s reelection chances. “We couldn’t hope for a better start to the election-year campaign,” it said.

The National Review (1/28/24 ([link removed]) ) admitted that Abbott is probably wrong on the constitutional question. Nevertheless, it called him the “MVP of border hawks” for orchestrating a public relations coup by forcing the federal government’s hand:

Abbott has managed to get the federal government in the position of actually removing physical barriers to illegal immigration at the border and insisting that it is imperative that it be permitted to continue doing so. This alone is a PR debacle for the administration, but it comes in a controversy—with its fraught legal and constitutional implications—that will garner massive attention out of proportion to its practical importance.

This is impressive by any measure.

The support of Republican states for Abbott elevates the matter further, but this also is a relatively small thing. The backing for Abbott is entirely rhetorical at this point and perhaps not very serious on the part of some Republican governors. It nonetheless serves to elevate a conflict over security on a small part of the border into what feels like a larger confrontation between all of Red America and the federal government.


** Underplayed significance
------------------------------------------------------------
NBC: Trump on 'poisoning the blood' remarks: 'I never knew that Hitler said it'

Donald Trump defended his use of the Hitlerian formulation "Illegal immigration is poisoning the blood of our nation," saying, "He didn’t say it the way I said it" (NBC, 12/22/23 ([link removed]) ).

As noted, AP and the Washington Post haven’t completely ignored the story—although the Times, as of this writing, has more or less looked the other way. But as the right celebrates Abbott's defiance and legal scholars worry about a constitutional crisis, the two big papers and the major wire service have clearly underplayed the standoff's significance.

Given that former President Donald Trump is now the likely Republican presidential nominee, with his neo-fascist ideas (ABC, 12/20/23 ([link removed]) ; NBC, 12/22/23 ([link removed]) ) about immigration the centerpiece of his campaign, one would think centrist news outlets would give this story more attention.

Even if American Renaissance and the National Review are right that this standoff is more rhetorical than a pre-staging of the next civil war, given that nearly half the states are backing a state’s defiance of the Supreme Court in an election, the major news outlets should be a part of that conversation.


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