Sign up for The Brief, The Texas Tribuneโ€™s daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.


Working after midnight Wednesday, Texas House Republicans revived key parts of a bill to create a new state border policing unit, upending Democratsโ€™ daylong efforts to sink it ahead of an important bill-passing deadline.

Democrats initially brought down House Bill 20 by state Rep. Matt Schaefer, R-Tyler, on a technicality late Tuesday night, leaving it out of reach of a House deadline to receive initial approval by midnight Thursday because the House had already set its Thursday calendar earlier in the night.

But Republicans gave the policing unit new life less than three hours later, taking language from HB 20 and attaching it as an amendment to a separate immigration-related measure, House Bill 7. The amendment was adopted 90-51.

That borrowed language would create the Border Protection Unit, which is meant to use nondeadly force to deter people from crossing the Mexican border, with its officers able to โ€œarrest, apprehend or detain persons crossing the Texas-Mexico border unlawfullyโ€ in border-region counties.

Members of the policing unit would not have to be law officers.

The creation of such a unit will likely test the stateโ€™s limits on immigration enforcement, which has traditionally fallen under the federal governmentโ€™s purview.

Opponents of the policing unit said it would allow untrained โ€œvigilantesโ€ to go after anyone they perceived to be a migrant.

Rep. Victoria Neave Criado, D-Dallas, said the unit would expose Texans of color to racial profiling.

โ€œWhat is to prohibit or stop a Border Protection Unit from setting up their post in Hispanic neighborhoods?โ€ said Rep. Erin Gรกmez, D-Brownsville, who said her largely Hispanic community would be at particular risk of racial profiling because of its proximity to the border.

Schaefer pitched his bill as a way to help Texas better control the crossing of migrants and combat dangerous drugs at the Mexican border.

โ€œThe serious nature of the fentanyl crisis cannot be overstated,โ€ Schaefer said while introducing the bill Tuesday night.

Democrats had placed themselves in position to sink HB 20 by delaying action on multiple bills throughout the day โ€” a practice known as โ€œchubbingโ€ that is used to avoid controversial topics near the end of legislative deadlines.

Democrats celebrated the billโ€™s demise and promised to be vigilant for attempts to revive the policing unit, but their efforts to challenge the amendment to HB 7 on technicalities were rejected by the House parliamentarian.

Neave Criado said the legislation would have devastated law enforcementโ€™s relationships with communities all over the state.

โ€œThis bill was not just about the border or migrants, it was a statewide bill that would have been devastating whether you are new Texans or your family has been here for generations,โ€ said Neave Criado, who leads the Mexican American Legislative Caucus. โ€œIt would have emboldened civilian vigilantes to be able to set up checkpoints in our cities.โ€


Tickets are on sale now for the 2023 Texas Tribune Festival, happening in downtown Austin on Sept. 21-23. Get your TribFest tickets by May 31 and save big!

 Learn about The Texas Tribuneโ€™s policies, including our partnership with The Trust Project to increase transparency in news.

Alexa Ura reported for The Texas Tribune from 2013 to 2023. She covered the complex dynamics of race, ethnicity, wealth, poverty and power and how they are shaping the future of Texas and Texans, in the...