www.washingtonpost.com Open in urlscan Pro
104.127.182.179  Public Scan

URL: https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2023/05/01/greg-abbott-illegal-immigrants-victims/
Submission: On May 02 via manual from US — Scanned from US

Form analysis 1 forms found in the DOM

<form class="w-100 " autocomplete="off">
  <div class="relative flex"><input class="pl-sm pr-sm font--subhead font-xxs h-md light brad-2 b form-input-valid bg-white gray-darkest flex-grow-1 w-50-ns ma-0 border-box" id="paywall__input-field" type="email" autocomplete="email"
      data-private="true" value="" style="transition: padding 200ms linear 200ms; border-top-right-radius: 0px; border-bottom-right-radius: 0px;"><label for="paywall__input-field" class="absolute"
      style="transition: all 200ms ease-in-out 0s; transform: translate3d(16px, -50%, 0px); transform-origin: left top; top: 50%; color: rgb(90, 90, 90); pointer-events: none;">Enter email address</label></div>
  <div class="dn">
    <div class="db mt-xs mb-xs ease-in-out duration-400 left mt-xs"><label for="tosCheckbox" class="db gray-dark relative flex pt-xxs pb-xxs items-start "><span class="relative mr-xs" style="height: 16px; width: 16px;"><input id="tosCheckbox"
            class="tos-checkbox b bc-gray-light bg-white brad-2 relative outline-none appearance-none ma-0 " type="checkbox" data-testid="tosCheckbox" style="height: 16px; width: 16px;"><svg class="absolute top-50 left-0 -translate-y-50  dn"
            viewBox="0 0 24 24" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" style="height: 16px; width: 16px;">
            <title>Check</title>
            <path d="M10.052 16.245L3.265 9.46l-1.767 1.768 7.778 7.778a1.25 1.25 0 0 0 1.863-.107L23.415 3.413 21.456 1.86 10.052 16.245z" fill="#fff" fill-rule="nonzero"></path>
          </svg></span><span class="db font-xxxxs" style="padding-top: 1px;"><span data-testid="tosCheckboxText">By signing up, you agree to the
            <a target="_blank" style="color:inherit;" class="underline" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/terms-of-service/2011/11/18/gIQAldiYiN_story.html">Terms of Service</a> and
            <a target="_blank" style="color:inherit;" class="underline" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/privacy-policy/2011/11/18/gIQASIiaiN_story.html">Privacy Policy</a>.</span><span class="font-xxs red"
            style="line-height: 0;">*</span></span></label></div>
  </div><button id="CTA_BUTTON_TEXT_CTA_WRAPPER" role="button" class="btn db dib-ns mt-sm ma-0 pointer dib btn subs-theme bg-blue" type="submit"
    style="white-space: normal; box-sizing: border-box; border-radius: 31px; padding: 7px 32px; width: 100%; border: initial;"><span id="CTA_BUTTON_TEXT" data-public="true">Start reading</span></button>
</form>

Text Content

Accessibility statementSkip to main content

Democracy Dies in Darkness

Subscribe

Sign in




Close
The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness
NationalClimate Education Health Innovations Investigations National Security
Obituaries Science Abortion
NationalClimate Education Health Innovations Investigations National Security
Obituaries Science Abortion



TEXAS GOV. ABBOTT’S RHETORIC ON SHOOTING VICTIMS REFLECTS RIGHTWARD MOVE

By Arelis R. Hernández
and 
Emily Wax-Thibodeaux
May 1, 2023 at 8:40 p.m. EDT

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott speaks during a news conference at Uvalde High School on
May 25, 2022, in Uvalde, Tex. (Sergio Flores/FTWP)

Listen
8 min
Comment on this storyComment31

Gift Article

Share

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s decision to identify five mass killing victims as
“illegal immigrants” is part of a political evolution for the once-judicious
Republican who has escalated his rhetoric to match the rightward moves of the
Republican Party.


WpGet the full experience.Choose your planArrowRight


Abbott’s comments — for which his office had to apologize Monday because they
were inaccurate — drew a torrent of outrage, but with Texas Republicans firmly
in control of the state, his opponents have had few options to hold him
accountable.



Texas law enforcement continues to search for the man accused of slaughtering
five members of a Honduran family inside their home in a rural area north of
Houston. The slayings, according to witnesses, came after the victims’ family
asked the gunman, who lives next door, to stop firing his weapon late Friday
night because children were trying to sleep.

Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



Abbott on Sunday tweeted — first from his campaign account and then from his
official government account — about a reward for information about “the criminal
who killed five illegal immigrants.”

In a statement on Monday, the governor’s office backpedaled, blaming inaccurate
information from federal officials.

“We’ve since learned that at least one of the victims may have been in the
United States legally,” Abbott spokeswoman Renae Eze said. “We regret if the
information was incorrect and detracted from the important goal of finding and
arresting the criminal.”

Abbott’s focus on the victims’ immigration status is the latest in a string of
inflammatory statements from the governor, a shift for the former jurist
previously known for weighing his political moves carefully to avoid blowback.
But as his constituency lurches rightward, Abbott has reacted with more abandon.

Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



In recent weeks, the governor promised to pardon a Texas veteran convicted of a
murdering a Black Lives Matter protester. He has not backed down despite the
subsequent release by the court of documents showing Daniel Perry’s racist and
threatening messages and content.

In 2022, one day after the slaughter of schoolchildren and teachers in Uvalde,
he told parents at a public assembly that it “could have been worse,” if not for
law enforcement’s heroic actions. Reporters later learned police waited more
than an hour to confront the Robb Elementary school gunman, after which Abbott
said he had been misled.

When speaking about immigration, he has consistently heightened “invasion”
rhetoric and challenged constitutional norms around immigration, tying migrants
to lawlessness and busing them across the country to drop them in Democratic
areas.

Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



“He has recognized that his Republican base and the conservative electorate of
Texas doesn’t hold him to his mistakes because they might not see these as
mistakes,” said Cal Jillson, a political scientist at Southern Methodist
University. “He’s just decided he can speak his mind and is not likely to pay a
heavy price for it.”

Democrats argue Abbott is reflecting the growing extremism of the party he
represents. They cited the circumstances of the most recent killing, during
which women tried to save children as the gunman fired.

“Could you imagine having no compassion about two women who piled themselves on
top of a body of a child trying to save them during such a gruesome attack?”
said Rep. Veronica Escobar (D-Tex.). “That’s Greg Abbott’s Republican Party.”

Texas Gov. Abbott tests whether conservative is enough in Trump GOP

While the governor has always responded to the most conservative elements of his
party, experts said, Abbott has often been pressured by conservative media or
hard-liners before acting. Before announcing the planned pardon, Abbott was
called out on it by former Fox News host Tucker Carlson.

Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



But increasingly, Texas political experts say, Abbott appears to be going
further with his rhetoric unilaterally with an eye to not ceding ground to
potential Republican competitors like Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. DeSantis is
widely expected to seek the presidency, while Abbott has been silent about his
national ambitions.

“If you ever want to know what the governor is going to do next, all you have to
do is subscribe to the Orlando Sentinel or Miami Herald,” said University of
Texas at San Antonio political scientist Jon Taylor, referencing two Florida
newspapers and their coverage of DeSantis.

Abbott, who is in his third term as governor, has never been more powerful in
Texas. He enjoys near complete approval from Republican voters — and many
independents and South Texas Democrats — for his policies such as border
security initiative Operation Lone Star. His political appointees are scattered
throughout the state in influential sectors and in courtrooms. Because of
redistricting, he and his allies have helped make it harder for a Democrat to
win or hold onto seats. And he has managed to fortify his hold on voters and
their state representatives regardless of the state’s growing Black, Latino and
Asian American population.

That has allowed Abbott to maneuver with little apparent damage through
potentially damaging circumstances, such as the deaths of scores of Texans after
a winter storm triggered a prolonged power outage.



The governor’s Republican colleagues, on Monday, focused not on his comments
about those killed in the weekend attack but on his statement about the status
of the shooter, who has been deported multiple times.

Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



“Gov. Abbott stated the facts,” said James Wesolek, a spokesman for the Texas
Republican Party who declined to answer other questions. “I hope you will report
them.”

When Abbott speaks, he is not directing his message to all of Texas, political
scientists said. The governor, who rarely grants interviews outside of friendly
conservative media, is almost always talking to his base. The mass killing that
took place in San Jacinto County was not far from Montgomery County, a hotbed of
conservative party activists who rejected the governor’s short-lived mask
mandates in 2020 and played host to Abbott’s conservative rivals.

“The fact that the victims were undocumented is completely irrelevant other than
to perhaps enhance the association between illegal immigration and lawlessness,”
Jones said. “It’s the type of messaging that rallies his base, and this is what
they want to see him do.”

Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



Paul Chabot, a retired U.S. Navy commander who runs a company that helps
conservatives move from blue states to red states, drew a contrast between San
Jacinto Sheriff Greg Capers’s compassionate words and the governor’s.

While the sheriff said their immigration status was irrelevant to the crime,
Chabot said he thinks that the governor had a point and that criticism of it is
ultimately “much to do about nothing.”

“The sheriff is right; it’s murder on American soil,” Chabot said. “Abbott is
far removed from it. He’s pointing out a larger problem. The governor is
speaking Texas-wide. The sheriff is right for focusing in on the victims and the
manhunt.”

Story continues below advertisement



Speaking to fellow Texas conservatives is also part of a broader power flex by
Abbott to ensure his legislative agenda passes. Abbott has been barnstorming the
state around his school-choice package that will create vouchers for private and
religious schools. He faces resistance from rural state lawmakers worried about
the governor undermining public school budgets.

Advertisement


“Abbott is at the point where he needs his political power to be at its
pinnacle, to use all his influence, power and pressure to make sure Republicans
approve the legislation he wants and vote down the ones he doesn’t, which is
especially the case for school choice,” said Mark P. Jones, political scientist
at Rice University’s Baker Institute.

Democrats, in the meantime, are virtually powerless to deliver political
consequences. After all the statements and policy debates, the party has
portrayed Abbott as tone-deaf, personally unsympathetic and cruel. But they have
not made a dent in his popularity, nor have they won a statewide election in
three decades.

Story continues below advertisement



The Texas Legislature has not passed any gun control measure despite being home
to two of the deadliest school shootings in U.S. history, along with a host of
killings in other locations. Instead, the governor has advocated for fewer gun
restrictions and called reform measures advocated for by the families of victims
unconstitutional.

Advertisement


After school shootings in Santa Fe and Uvalde, victims’ parents have
relentlessly lobbied state leaders to raise the firearm purchasing age, which
they argue may have prevented the 18-year-old gunman at Uvalde’s Robb Elementary
School from obtaining a rifle. But their impassioned pleas were met in recent
days by lawmakers refusing to bring the measure up for a vote.

“The momentum is on the other side,” said Dustin Rynders, an attorney with the
Texas Civil Rights Project.

“Our state legislative session is characterized by increased border
militarization, attacks on transgender children and the banning of books.”

Molly Hennessy-Fiske contributed to this report.

31 Comments
GiftOutline
Gift Article




Subscribe to comment and get the full experience. Choose your plan →


View more

Loading...
Advertisement

TOP STORIES
Technology
Big Tech news and how to take control of your data and devices
Analysis|To become an Amazon Clinic patient, first you sign away some privacy


Elon Musk describes Starship flight as ‘roughly what I expected’


How Mark Zuckerberg broke Meta’s workforce


Refresh
Try a different topic

Sign in or create a free account to save your preferences
Advertisement


Advertisement

Company
 * About The Post
 * Newsroom Policies & Standards
 * Diversity and Inclusion
 * Careers
 * Media & Community Relations
 * WP Creative Group
 * Accessibility Statement

Get The Post
 * 
 * Become a Subscriber
 * Gift Subscriptions
 * Mobile & Apps
 * Newsletters & Alerts
 * Washington Post Live
 * Reprints & Permissions
 * Post Store
 * Books & E-Books
 * Newspaper in Education
 * Print Archives (Subscribers Only)
 * Today’s Paper
 * Public Notices

Contact Us
 * Contact the Newsroom
 * Contact Customer Care
 * Contact the Opinions team
 * Advertise
 * Licensing & Syndication
 * Request a Correction
 * Send a News Tip
 * Report a Vulnerability

Terms of Use
 * Digital Products Terms of Sale
 * Print Products Terms of Sale
 * Terms of Service
 * Privacy Policy
 * Cookie Settings
 * Submissions & Discussion Policy
 * RSS Terms of Service
 * Ad Choices

washingtonpost.com © 1996-2023 The Washington Post
 * washingtonpost.com
 * © 1996-2023 The Washington Post
 * About The Post
 * Contact the Newsroom
 * Contact Customer Care
 * Request a Correction
 * Send a News Tip
 * Report a Vulnerability
 * Download the Washington Post App
 * Policies & Standards
 * Terms of Service
 * Privacy Policy
 * Cookie Settings
 * Print Products Terms of Sale
 * Digital Products Terms of Sale
 * Submissions & Discussion Policy
 * RSS Terms of Service
 * Ad Choices

4.14.30




Already have an account? Sign in

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


TWO WAYS TO READ THIS ARTICLE:

Create an account
Free
 * Access this article


Enter email address
CheckBy signing up, you agree to the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.*
Start reading
Subscribe
$4every 4 weeks
 * Unlimited access to all articles
 * Save stories to read later

Subscribe