'Not acceptable': GOP lawmaker targets treatment of migrants, but doesn't blame floating barrier wall

WASHINGTON — Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-Texas., condemned the crisis at the southern border and inhumane treatment of migrants attempting to cross into the United States, but did not pin the blame on Texas Gov. Greg Abbott in an interview Sunday.

Gonzales, whose district lies along Texas' border with Mexico, said on CBS’ “Face the Nation” there is a “disconnect between what is happening at the top and the person at the ground that is doing the actual function.”  

The Justice Department informed Abbott that Texas officials have until Monday to remove a floating barrier wall of buoys he recently approved in the Rio Grande Valley or else face a lawsuit. At the shoreline of the river are razor-wire barriers also put up at the instruction of Abbott. Critics have said the barriers are inhumane and pose a danger to public safety. 

Abbott scoffed at the letter, writing on Twitter, "We will see you in court Mr. President."

Texas Department of Public Safety officers observe migrants from behind concertina after a group of migrants crossed the Rio Grande River on July 20, 2023, from Piedras Negras, Coahuila, Mexico into Eagle Pass, Texas hoping to seek asylum in the U.S.

Gonzales said “the border crisis has been anything but humane” but added that he thinks Abbott is doing what he can to secure the border.

“I think you’re seeing how desperate a situation is happening in Texas,” Gonzales said, calling for his fellow lawmakers to act on the issue. “We cannot just wait on the president to solve things. We can’t wait for governors to try to fix it themselves. Congress has a role to play in this.”

Investigations:Along Texas' floating border barrier, migrant children left bloody by razor wire

GOP lawmaker: Inhumane treatment of migrants is 'not acceptable'

State troopers were reportedly ordered to push migrants attempting to cross the river back into the water and deny them drinking water in extreme heat. Gonzales on Sunday slammed the treatment and said it was “not acceptable.”

“Everything that is happening along the border is just adding fuel to the fire because … you’re having people at the very top say one thing and the people down at the ground do another,” he said.

“The governor no doubt is doing everything he can to secure the border,” Gonzales added, laying the blame on lower ranked officials. 

Migrants travel along a steep embankment searching for an opening in razor wire lining part of the Rio Grande on Saturday, July 22, 2023, in Eagle Pass, Texas.

In a letter to President Joe Biden last week, more than 80 Democratic lawmakers led by Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-Texas, attacked the border policies as “barbaric” and “putting asylum-seekers at serious risk of injury and death.” The letter also took aim at the floating barrier wall, which could pose an increased risk of drowning for migrants who attempt to cross the Rio Grande

Gonzales said he did not “think the buoys are the problem” since “we’ve seen people drown last year, there were hundreds of migrants that are drowning,” adding that the buoys occupy a small portion of the river. 

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