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Judge blocks Texas law that gives police broad powers to arrest migrants who illegally enter US

Published:Friday | March 1, 2024 | 12:24 PM
Migrants who crossed the Rio Grande and entered the US from Mexico are lined up for processing by US Customs and Border Protection, September 23, 2023, in Eagle Pass, Texas. A federal judge on Thursday, February 29, 2024 blocked a new Texas law that gives police broad powers to arrest migrants suspected of illegally entering the US, dealing a victory to the Biden administration in its feud with Republican Gov. Greg Abbott over immigration enforcement. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, file)

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — A federal judge on Thursday blocked a new Texas law that would give police broad powers to arrest migrants suspected of illegally entering the United States, dealing a victory to the Biden administration with a broad rejection of Republican Governor Greg Abbott's immigration enforcement effort.

US District Judge David Ezra's preliminary injunction pausing a law that was set to take effect March 5 came as President Joe Biden and his likely Republican challenger in November, Donald Trump, were visiting Texas' southern border to discuss immigration.

The state attorney general's office immediately appealed the ruling, according to a statement Thursday.

The ruling rebuked Texas' immigration enforcement effort on multiple fronts, brushing off claims by Republicans about an ongoing “invasion” along the southern border due to record-high illegal crossings. Ezra also said the law violates the Constitution's supremacy clause, conflicts with federal immigration law, and could hamper US foreign relations and treaty obligations.

It is the second time in six months that Ezra has stopped one of Abbott's border escalations, having also ruled against a floating barrier Texas erected in the Rio Grande.

Allowing Texas to “permanently supersede federal directives” due to a so-called invasion would “amount to nullification of federal law and authority — a notion that is antithetical to the Constitution and has been unequivocally rejected by federal courts since the Civil War,” the judge wrote.

Opponents have called the Texas measure the most dramatic attempt by a state to police immigration since a 2010 Arizona law that opponents derided as the “show me your papers” bill.

The US Supreme Court partially struck down the Arizona law, but some Texas Republicans want that ruling to get a second look.

In his decision, Ezra wrote that the Texas law was preempted by the decision in the Arizona case, adding that the two laws had “striking similarities.”

He also struck down state officials' claims that large numbers of illegal border crossings constitute an “invasion,” saying calling it such is a novel interpretation of the Constitution's invasion clause and that allowing the law to stand would be permitting the state to engage in war.

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