RIDDLE FILES "ARIZONA STYLE" LEGISLATION, VOTER ID BILL
AUSTIN - Six months ago, Representative Debbie Riddle (R - District 150) created a media frenzy when she said she would be introducing legislation similar to a provision in Arizona's SB 1070 as soon as permitted for the upcoming session.
She made good on that promise earlier today when she filed the states' first batch of bills, including HB 17, which creates the offense of Criminal Trespass by Illegal Alien and allows for their arrest by state and local police officers.
"My constituents want to see that their representative is just as serious about getting the job done this session as they are," Riddle said. "They've got a real fire in their bellies, and I'm here to show them that I'm ready to match that tenacity."
Riddle set up some folding chairs and pitched a make-shift campsite outside the floor of the Texas House of Representatives beginning on Saturday afternoon to make sure she was the first in line when the Chief Clerk's office opened for early filing this morning. She spent both Saturday and Sunday night sleeping on the lobby floor.
"A visitor that walked by told me that I reminded them of the kids that camp out for Duke basketball tickets in Durham, North Carolina," Riddle said. "It was eye-opening to realize that people think it's normal to be passionate about something like college basketball, but odd to be passionate about your state's politics."
Although the immigration legislation has generated the most buzz this year, Riddle deliberately filed her Voter ID bill before any of her others, making it the very first bill filed for the new session: HB 16. The bill requires one form of photo ID or two forms of non-photo ID in order to vote in Texas.
"Voter ID has got to be one of the top priorities of the legislature this session." Riddle said. "It passed in the House two session ago and was stalled by politics in the Senate. It passed in the Senate last year and then was stalled by politics in the House. There are no more excuses left this time around."
Seven other bills rounded out the first day of Riddle's early filings: HB 18, imposing sanctions for municipalities that allow "sanctuary cities;" HB 19, which seeks to imprison unlicensed drivers who cause serious accidents; HJR 16 and HB 23, which allow counties to set their own appraisal caps; HB 22, requiring all state agencies to determine and report their costs related to illegal aliens; HB 21, requiring school districts to report the number of illegal aliens attending their schools; and HB 20, increasing the penalty for burglary of a motor vehicle to a state jail felony.






Debbie Riddle has fallen off her rocker. I can't believe she's pushing this after it's been proved that the Private Prison Lobbyists are behind this bill anyway. If she truly wanted what was best for this country she would make the immigrants pay big fines and give them some sort of status. If we had big fines, then it would bring a lot of revenue, which our states need to get out of the crazy fiscal crisis we are in.
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