TEXIT Is Dead In 2021
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With 20 days left in the 87th Texas Legislative Session and deadlines fast approaching, you will start to hear more about pieces of legislation that are dead. We will highlight some of those here at KFYO.com.
One bill that is dead? The so-called TEXIT legislation by Rep. Kyle Biedermann. Biedermann said his bill didn t even get a hearing in committee. According to the Dallas Morning News, supporters of the legislation are urging Governor Greg Abbott to call a special session to take up the piece of legislation, but that is unlikely to happen. The legislation was a longshot to begin with and Governor Abbott doesn t strike me as the TEXIT type of Governor.
https://www.afinalwarning.com/490704.html (Natural News) When Donald Trump was elected president in 2016, Democrat activists in blue states like California threatened to secede but never really did much more than that make threats.
But now that the most left-wing regime in the history of the country has stolen its way into power, one Texas lawmaker is doing a lot more than just making idle threats.
Rep. Kyle Biedermann (R) is
acting.
The state representative has filed legislation offering voters the choice of whether they want to remain part of the United States or do what Great Britain did when its citizens decided last decade to leave the European Union.
Kyle Biedermann, Texas State Rep Who Marched to Capitol, Introduces Bill to Secede From Union
On 1/28/21 at 11:16 AM EST
Kyle Biedermann, a Republican state representative in Texas who marched with pro-Trump supporters at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, filed a bill on Tuesday that could give Texans the opportunity to secede from the United States.
Biedermann introduced House Bill 1359 – also known as the Texas Independence Referendum Act – to give citizens the chance to vote on whether the Texas Legislature should create a joint interim committee to develop a plan for achieving state independence.
The Republican lawmaker is the first legislator in nearly a century, and only the second since the Civil War, to file a formal bill calling for state-level secession from the Union,