March 21 ( UPI )- Oklahoma Republican House Speaker Charles McCall has introduced immigration regulations in response to a Texas law that is currently pending, one of the utmost in the country.
Every state has been transformed into a frontier position as a result of the Biden administration’s tried policies, McCall claimed in a speech announcing the legislation.
” Oklahoma is a law and order state, so it ought to be the next destination for illegal immigrants who cross the border.” For these reasons, and in light of recent court decisions regarding Senate Bill 4‘s removal from Texas, I’m introducing legislation to stable Oklahoma’s southern neighbors in the same way.
Oklahoma may be prepared to protect its borders from anyone who crosses our country illegally.
Texas S. B. 4 makes it illegal to enter the state from a foreign country anywhere other than a legitimate port of entry, a violence that could result in prison time, an attempt to deport a state court prosecutor, or both.
It would not apply to immigrants who entered Texas without license for as long as two years prior and who lived hundreds of miles away from the border.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbot, who has been at the centre of the world’s debate over immigration and frontier plan, has claimed the legislation is needed in response to a record number of border crossings that have sometimes left hundreds of thousands of new immigrants a day and to what they claim is the failure of the federal government to uphold the country’s existing border security laws.
Trying to step up immigration enforcement, Texas has been at odds with federal officials. The state’s military seized a 50- acre public park in Eagle Pass, a common migrant crossing spot along the U. S. Mexico line, and locked out U. S. Border Patrol agents.
Court arguments and back and forth over S. B. What the current law is and how border patrol officers are supposed to do is are unclear.
Sheriff of Kinney County, Brad Coe, stated that he is determined to speak with Attorney General about what was happening with the law. I’m on my way to his office right now, “he told The New York Times on Wednesday.