This blog on Texas education contains posts on accountability, testing, K-12 education, postsecondary educational attainment, dropouts, bilingual education, immigration, school finance, environmental issues, Ethnic Studies at state and national levels. It also represents my digital footprint, of life and career, as a community-engaged scholar in the College of Education at the University of Texas at Austin.
Monday, May 29, 2017
Texas Republican Called ICE on SB 4 Protesters, Threatened to Shoot Colleague
Here's another piece on today's incident on the House floor of the Texas Capitol (see earlier post) in the Texas Observer.
The incident happened as more than 1,000 immigrant rights supporters flooded the Texas Capitol.
A Texas Republican threatened to “put a bullet in one of his
colleague’s heads” during a scuffle on the House floor over the state’s
new anti-‘sanctuary cities’ law on Monday, the final day of the regular
legislative session. Representative Matt Rinaldi,
R-Irving, made the comment to Representative Poncho Nevárez during a
dispute that began when Rinaldi told two Hispanic lawmakers that he
called Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) on Senate Bill 4
protesters at the Capitol. “There was a subsequent exchange
between my brother Poncho and Representative Rinaldi and there was a
threat made from Rinaldi to put a bullet in one of my colleague’s
heads,” Representative Justin Rodriguez told reporters after the
incident. “That kind of threatening language, he needs to be called out
and held accountable for.”
Rinaldi later said on Facebook
that he called immigration agents “on several illegal immigrants who
held signs in the gallery which said ‘I am illegal and here to stay.'”
Rinaldi accused Nevárez of repeatedly threatening him on the House floor
during the scuffle.
“I made it clear that if he attempted to, in his words, ‘get me,’ I
would shoot him in self defense,” Rinaldi said. “I would shoot him in
self defense. I am currently under DPS protection.”
Nevárez responded on Twitter: “He’s a liar and hateful man. Got no use for him. God bless him.”
Nina Pruneda, a spokesperson for ICE, told the Observer she was not immediately sure whether the agency sent immigration agents to the Capitol in response to Rinaldi’s call. Earlier, at the beginning of the
incident, Rinaldi told Romero on the House floor that the hundreds of
protesters who were chanting in the gallery were a “disgrace,” Romero
told the Observer. “Fuck them, I called ICE,” Rinaldi said, according to Romero. Romero said that prompted
Representative Cesar Blanco to tell Rinaldi that Italian immigrants “are
just like us,” and Rinaldi responded, “Yeah, but we love our country.” “He saw a bunch of people who look Latino, and he assumed they were undocumented,” Romero told the Observer. “So how can he say SB 4 won’t lead to racial profiling?” The comments nearly sparked a fight among the three lawmakers before their colleagues broke it up, Romero said. “I’ve never seen anything like this on the House floor,” Romero said. To support journalism like this, donate to the Texas Observer.The dispute came as Blanco and Romero
were proudly discussing the hundreds of protesters who filled the
gallery with banners and chants and were ultimately kicked out, Romero
said. House rules prohibit any show of support or opposition from the
gallery. Watch video of the entire protest below:
The Monday protest, attended by more
than 1,000 immigrant rights supporters, coincided with sine die, the
Texas Legislature’s final day at work (barring a special session to take up a bathroom bill). The dispute is the latest in several contentious moments
around Senate Bill 4, the anti-’sanctuary cities’ law that critics say
will encourage racial profiling and tear immigrant families apart. The law, which goes into effect September 1, will allow police to ask people who’ve been detained — not just arrested
— about their immigration status. It also threatens to jail law
enforcement officials who limit cooperation with federal immigration
agents. The law has already prompted at least three Texas cities to take
legal action against the state.
At 3 a.m. Sunday, around 50 protesters met in front of the governor’s mansion near the Capitol in Austin for a musically themed protest of Senate Bill 4.
The crowd blared mariachi music through a megaphone for about an hour,
holding signs that read “no bedtime for bigots,” “goodnight SB 4” and
“you’ve disturbed our peace, so we’re disturbing yours.” Keep up with the ongoing protests at the Capitol below:
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