.@BillFoxLA Melugin fact-checks KJP: "[W]e heard Karine Jean-Pierre...say during that WH press briefing that mass releases are not happening here at the southern border...[T]hat is categorically false. That is not the reality of what's happening...We'll show you the reality." pic.twitter.com/edqUZJ9BwW— Curtis Houck (@CurtisHouck) May 12, 2023
The average price for regular gas in Arizona is third highest in the country, trailing only Hawaii & California.
At $4.68 for a gallon, it’s $1.14 more than the national average.
Biden's war on energy is having a devastating impact on Arizona families.https://t.co/WUBA3F286k— Kari Lake (@KariLake) May 12, 2023
Gather up the granny posse!
Texas Republicans want to recruit untrained citizens for border protection, worrying Democrats
AUSTIN, Texas — The Mexican American Legislative Caucus says legislation that would create a new “Border Protection Unit” would give power to what it calls “roaming vigilantes.”
And the group’s chair, State Rep. Victoria Neave Criado, says the bill would impact Texans across the entire state, not just along the border.
Among other things, HB 20 would allow “Border Protection Unit” officers to arrest, detain and deter individuals crossing the border illegally. And this would be allowed “within the state of Texas.”
But some of the language that most alarmed Rep. Neave Criado and other immigrant advocates is that which gives officers in the unit immunity from criminal and civil liability for authorized actions. The Democrat claims even some Republicans are concerned with that provision.
“You’re going to have these civilians, non-law enforcement, that are going to be able to set up shop throughout the state, be able to pull people over,” she told us. “They can, under the law, arrest, detain, repel even citizens. That’s going to create a mess for our local law enforcement to clean up, which is of significant concern.”
Neave Criado says the bill could also hurt officer recruitment for police departments across the state already short on manpower.
We’ve asked the bill’s author, Rep. Matt Schaeffer, R-Tyler, to join us on Inside Texas Politics numerous times over the last few weeks. But his office has told us every time that the Republican is too busy to join us.
After a public hearing and testimony on April 13, the bill was left pending in the State Affairs committee.