Texas Border initiative
Texas' Operation Lone Star has led to the apprehensions of more than 350,000 illegal immigrants, and the seizure of more than 362 million lethal doses of fentanyl, Gov. Greg Abbott said in a press release Friday.
The multi-agency effort to secure the U.S.-Mexico border, launched in March 2021 due to "insufficient policies from the federal government," includes resources from the Department of Public Safety and the National Guard.
The release issued by Abbott's office also said Texas has bused more than 9,100 migrants to Washington, D.C., since April, more than 5,200 migrants to New York City since Aug. 5, more than 1,500 migrants to Chicago since Aug. 31, and more than 890 migrants to Philadelphia since Nov. 15.
"Operation Lone Star continues to fill the dangerous gaps left by the Biden administration's refusal to secure the border," Abbott's office said.
"Every individual who is apprehended or arrested and every ounce of drugs seized would have otherwise made their way into communities across Texas and the nation due to President Biden's open border policies."
Abbott in December expanded Operation Lone Star in an effort to further secure the state's southern border.
"Until Congress acts or the Biden administration does its constitutionally required job, Texas Guardsmen and Troopers must bear the burden of securing the border," he said in a letter at the time to Department of Public Safety Director Steve McCraw and Texas Military Department Adjutant General Thomas Suelzer.
He also directed both leaders "to defend Texas against what amounts to an invasion of America's southern border."
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against President Joe Biden and his administration for allegedly breaking the Constitution in order to swiftly pass a trillion dollar spending package. The lawsuit, filed Wednesday, claims that Biden unlawfully signed the Democrats' $1.7 trillion omnibus package into law in December because it was not legally passed in the House.
Only 201 members were present when the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2023 was voted on by the House of Representatives in December 2022, and with half the members absent, the required quorum was not met, Paxton's lawsuit argues.
The Constitution requires that a quorum of members of the House of Representatives be present for the lower chamber of Congress to conduct any business, as stated in the lawsuit.
"Nowhere does the U.S. Constitution authorize the House to pass trillion-dollar bills when more than half the members are in their homes, vacationing, or are anywhere physically other than the United States Capitol Building," said Attorney General Paxton in a press release.
"Our Founders would be turning over in their graves if they could see how former Speaker Nancy Pelosi used proxy voting to upend our constitutional system." The House passed a revised version of the bill with 225 yea, 201 nay votes, and 1 present, however, the votes of those physically on the floor were only 88 yea and 113 nay. Several Republicans voted by proxy on the measure as well, along with most Democrats. “Because the omnibus spending bill wasn’t passed when a quorum of the House was present, it was never lawfully enacted, it's unconstitutional, and the federal government should be enjoined from implementing it," the press release stated.
“That is especially true regarding the 1.7 trillion-dollar bill that should have never been ‘passed.’ Joe Biden, who’s been in Washington for half a century, should have known he couldn’t legally sign it either. But he never seems to let the law get in the way of him doing whatever he wants to do."
Pelosi initially implemented proxy voting as a way to avoid spreading COVID-19 in 2020, but continued to allow members to vote without being present on the floor through December. The GOP ended the practice after it took control of the chamber in January.
Texas attorney general sues the Biden administration