The continuation of the border wall will begin next year after reaching a deal with private property owners.
This from thegatewaypundit.com.
Over 5 million illegals crossed into the U.S. since the illegitimate Obiden Regime opened the southern border.
Border Patrol expects the numbers to surge if/when Title 42 is ended.
FOX News reporter Bill Melugin is covering the catastrophe at the border.
“The rest of the mainstream media is largely ignoring this man-made catastrophe.’
BREAKING: A huge migrant caravan of over 1,000 people crossed illegally into El Paso, TX last night, making it the largest single group we have ever seen. The city of El Paso reports Border Patrol now has over 5,000 in custody & has released hundreds to city streets. @FoxNews pic.twitter.com/ewUQX757Lt
— Bill Melugin (@BillFOXLA) December 12, 2022
Effectively completing a portion of the multistate project launched by President Trump, in 2023 the state of Texas will resume the construction of border walls along the United States-Mexico border.
Governor Abbott wrote on his Twitter account:
“More border wall is going up next month.”
He concluded:
It took months to negotiate with private property owners on the border for the right to build on their property. We now should be building more border wall all of next year.
More border wall is going up next month.
It took months to negotiate with private property owners on the border for the right to build on their property.
We now should be building more border wall all of next year.
— Greg Abbott (@GregAbbott_TX) December 14, 2022
Newsmax reported:
During the Trump presidency, crews worked diligently to complete the 1,900-mile border wall through Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California.
But after [the Obiden Regime instituted its malfeasance] in January 2021, many of the barrier projects went dormant.
Abbott’s renewed urgency for completing Texas’ commitment to the border wall might have something to do with a Wednesday tweet, in which the governor characterized the record-breaking number of illegal crossings at the southern border as ‘unsustainable.’