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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott Ends His Onerous Truck Inspection Order Impeding International Commerce on the Mexican Border
The inspections caused great economic harm, and may also have violated the Dormant Foreign Commerce Clause of the Constitution.

Earlier today, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott ended a system of onerous inspections he had previously imposed on trucks crossing into his state from Mexico. The official rationale for the inspections was the supposed need to curb cross-border drug smuggling and illegal migration. But, as Reason's Fiona Harrigan explains, the inspections caused great harm for little, if any gain:
The enhanced inspections, which bolster efforts already carried out by Customs and Border Patrol (CBP), have brought traffic to a standstill in the name of stopping the illegal transportation of drugs and migrants. "We weren't taken into consideration," said Ernesto Gaytan, chair of the Texas Trucking Association (TXTA), telling Reuters that migrants rarely attempt to enter the U.S. on commercial trucks at ports of entry….
"Unfortunately, this new initiative duplicates existing screening efforts and leads to significant congestion, delaying the products Americans rely on from our largest trading partner, Mexico," reads a statement from the TXTA. Mexico's National Chamber of Freight Transport reported that its member companies were losing millions of dollars each day due to delays. The Texas International Produce Association implored Abbott to modify his policy, with CEO Dante Galeazzi writing that "U.S. trucking companies are losing money as they sit around for days with no loads to haul." Galeazzi reported hearing "that a trucking company is refusing to send trucks south of San Antonio out of concern there will be no cargo available." Perishable goods run the risk of spoiling during long waits in the Texas heat.
Far from being a localized issue, the delays imposed by Abbott's new inspection measures have also irked federal border officials, who warn about broader supply chain challenges. CBP described recent wait times "exceeding five hours and commercial traffic dropping by as much as 60 percent," noting that its officials already "comprehensively" inspect and clear vehicles to enter the U.S. "The strength of the American economy relies heavily on the efficient flow of cross-border commerce," said CBP.
After an outcry by truckers and others, Abbott terminated the inspections. He has tried to claim victory by citing agreements reached with the governors of Mexican border states. But, in fact, as the Texas Tribune has documented, the agreements don't include any significant provisions beyond what the Mexicans were already doing:
Abbott said the deals with Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León and Tamaulipas were "historic," calling them an example of how border states can work together on immigration. But three of the four Mexican governors said they will simply continue security measures they put in place before Abbott ordered the state inspections.
The fourth, Nuevo León Gov. Samuel Alejandro García Sepúlveda — whose state shares only 9 miles of the 1,200-mile Texas-Mexico border — agreed to set up new checkpoints for commercial trucks.
This strongly suggests that the inspections were more about grandstanding for the benefit of Abbott's political base, than solving any genuine problem.
In addition, it is likely that they were also unconstitutional. The Dormant Commerce Clause of the Constitution restricts state regulations that impede interstate and foreign commerce. Most of the relevant legal precedents are about state laws that burden interstate commerce. But Supreme Court precedent makes clear that similar constraints apply to state regulation of international trade, which thereby infringes the "Dormant Foreign Commerce Clause."
The legal doctrine here is complicated, and I am by no means expert on all of it. But I would tentatively say that Abbott's inspection regime was a fairly obvious violation of the Dormant Foreign Commerce Clause. Supreme Court precedent is especially clear that the Dormant Commerce Clause forbids state regulations that target international or interstate commerce or discriminate against it. The Abbott inspections focused exclusively on cross-border trade, and were explicitly intended to target it. No similarly onerous inspections were imposed on purely domestic trucking.
I welcome correction by Dormant Commerce Clause experts. But if I have this right, it looks like an easy case. The issue may be moot, as the inspections have ended. However, it could arise again if Abbott or another border-state governor decides to institute a similar policy in the future. It is also possible that truckers and others harmed by Abbott's policies could sue for damages. The Supreme Court has ruled that Dormant Commerce Clause violations can sometimes give rise to damages lawsuits under 42 U.S.C. Section 1983.
Some conservative jurists, such as Supreme Court Justices Clarence Thomas and the late Antonin Scalia, have argued that the Dormant Commerce Clause doctrine lacks originalist support and should be abolished. If so, the neither Abbott's policy nor anything else could violate it. I won't try to assess the merits of this longstanding debate here, except to note that adopting Scalia Thomas' position would require reversal of longstanding Supreme Court precedent.
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Come on, state vehicle inspections don't violate the Commerce Clause per se. There has to be a factual showing that the burden outweighs the benefit, or some such. That in turn requires a lawsuit, which doesn't exist at present to my knowledge.
... Law student style dumb questions are out of season
Somin, partisan, Democrat attack dog. Dismissed.
It is not the state inspections per se that violate the Constitution, it is the actions of the Governor to negotiate with foreign governments that is the violation. There is no 'may' about it. It is absolutely, unequivacably an unconstitutional act by the Governor.
The interesting thing is how quickly those who profess to honor and obey the Constitution throw those sentiments overboard when it suit them. What a bunch of hypocrites!
Apart from whether the agreements Abbott reached with the governors of Mexican border states include any significant provisions beyond what the Mexicans were already doing, aren't they unconstitutional? Article I, section 10, provides, "No state shall, without the Consent of Congress ... enter into any Agreement or Compact with another State, or with a foreign Power...."
They are!
This is another in a long string of stunts by Abbott to try to make Texans forget he was all in on the Covid tyranny for months.
This country has immigration laws. Prof. Somin does not like them, but they exist nonetheless. President Biden (or, more precisely, whoever is actually making the decisions for that barely-sentient husk) has decided not to enforce those laws, in a gross dereliction of his Constitutional duty to "see that the laws are faithfully executed."
Millions are streaming across the border unchecked, as our "Border Patrol" is reduced to a 24-7 concierge service for migrants. Of course, as they are completely overwhelmed by their concierge duties, they cannot attend to the tons of drugs and other contraband also crossing the border, leaving untold dead Americans in their wake. It's not very complicated for the Mexican criminal cartels: overwhelm the Border Patrol with smuggled migrants at Point A, then bring across contraband at Point B. It must be very lucrative.
The majority of Americans, unlike ACELA Corridor elites and ivory tower eggheads, fail to see the benefits of this situation.
In United States v. Arizona (2003), a majority of the Supreme Court held that immigration enforcement is the exclusive purview and responsibility of the federal government, and the states may not encroach upon it. So, what can be done if the federal government shirks its responsibility? Not a damn thing, said the Court. It was a 5-3 decision (with Justice Kagan recused). The thrust of the dissents was that the federal government and the states had concurrent power over immigration enforcement. Rumor has it that Chief Justice Roberts switched his vote to join the liberals to avoid a 4-4 non-precedential ruling. I don't know if that's true, but it would definitely be on-brand for Roberts.
My advice to Texas would be to pass immigration enforcement laws like those struck down in U.S. v. Arizona and hope the new membership of the Supreme Court will overturn it. (Texas would also have the benefit of going through the 5th Circuit (instead of the 9th, like Arizona.))
TELL US MORE ABOUT HOW MUCH YOU HATE DEMOCRACY
Your love for and grasp of the concept of democracy are touching. What part of democracy do you like more: the part where the President ignores democratically-passed laws or the part where unelected judges nullify them?
What he loves is the part where the elite lie about the mental competency of their puppet candidate, about terrorist plots, about a Chinese virus, about Russian collusion, and more, to trick voters into replacing a real president with a barely-sentient husk.
The two comments preceding this one make the same error. No hyphen should be used in a double modifier when the first word ends in "ly."
The irony of someone like you insulting Biden's cognitive ability is simply delicious.
Punching down isn't "ironic", Alanis.
when you type in all caps it's LIKE YOU'RE SHOUTING.
It is helpful in that it identifies you as a dumbass (be honest, you drive a 4WD Truck that hasn't spent a minute off asphalt, Believe in Global Warming, and wear a mask even when you're taking a dump (not so dumb actually)
All the trucks had to got though CBP inspections already. The notion that Biden has made open boarders is a Republican lie.
The illegal immigrants aren't' coming in via these trucks, clueless.
it's "Border" (dumbass)
Ah, a Kremlin shill, and, therefore, traitor. Sod off to Moscow, child-killer.
What kind of lunacy is this? Did someone escape from one of the other Reason comment threads?
Texan here. Abbott has done several things over the last year or so to look more Trumpian and virtue signal the MAGA. folks. This stunt held up some shipments at the border (supply chain anybody?) and they just reported on the news that zero drug or immigration violations were found. Just stupid political theater.
I don’t know what he’s worried about at this point. He’s clean through the Republican primary and all that stands between him and another term is Pathetic Beto. Abbott could save a lot of campaign cash and just run one ad with video of Beto’s gun bullshit and win by double digits.
I think your answer makes it clear-he has bigger interests than governor of Texas
Anything other than open borders is short of what Somin has in mind for America.
Anyone asserting qualifications on border crossings is the enemy.
Holding up shipments of products during a time of shortages and empty shelves while wasting tax money for the political theater of being Tough on Mexicans is fine, though. Right?
Not to mention the contribution to rising prices.
Abbott is yet another compete asshole.
Holding up shipments of products during a time of shortages and empty shelves while wasting tax money for the political theater of being Tough on Mexicans is fine, though. Right?
The tradeoffs of picket lines are easy to see, but sometimes they're effective in achieving one's goals. Sometimes not.
You’ve made the classic mistake of thinking you had something worthwhile to say.
Pithy, but maybe you ought to look in the mirror. 99.9% of your comments are ad-hominem attacks on others.
We were seeing shortages in S. Texas groceries. The issue is partially Mexican produce, but much more importantly, shortage of trucks. Trucks that are idling for a whole day in a miles long line at the border aren't making deliveries. And Abbott was bragging that his officers took 15-20% of trucks out of service for safety violations.
Even if a Mexican truck was just going to transfer the load at a warehouse, an American truck is sitting around waiting for the stuff to show up. That truck is not making deliveries to grocery stores.
The only silver lining is that, while he's an a**hole, Abbott is not senile. He realized he was taking flak from Republicans, especially recently converted Hispanics, so he decided to declare victory with this "agreement" with the governor of Nuevo Leon. Check out a map and see how much border we have with Nuevo Leon.
“ inspections caused great harm for little, if any gain”
Then those inspections were quite similar to lockdowns and vaccine mandates.
LOL....spot on. 🙂
Sure, except for the complete lack of any harm from vaccine mandates. And the massive benefits from them.
Lack of any harm? You really do live on another planet, don't you?
Interesting. Citing an openly anti-Abbott, anti-conservative source to make subjective claims to reach a predetermined conclusion. Not much “Reason” to that. Just another hack with an agenda. Less that what I would expect from Reason.
Sure, this was political grandstanding. How much of today’s politics isn’t? A large chunk of Biden’s (puppeteers’) moves thus far have been dog whistles for the faithful, not what’s in the best interest of the country. It’s rarely ever what’s in the best interest of the country. It’s about big donors, reelection, agenda, etc. Perhaps Somin could be bothered to take a minute addressing the sins of his own.
Who exactly do you think Prof. Simon’s “own” are?
Damnit, autocorrect! *Somin, of course!
"Onerous Inspections"????
Oh you mean like what I go through at the Airport several times a week? (Hey, at least the dude in Miami was nice enough to give me a Reach Around) And what's it been? 20 years of passengers taking off their shoes to insure there's not a Richard Reeves Jr. out there?? (I'll give it to the A-rabs, 75 years of getting their asses kicked and they still come back for more) And I don't get it, how else is Hunter B. going to get his Co-Cay-ain-a if they actually start inspecting trucks??
Frank
Non-lawyer here, but I haven’t seen this asked:
Can the companies that suffered loss under Abbott’s clearly unconstitutional actions sue him for damages?
If not, why? What remedies are available to prevent him, or other governors, from doing this every time a president from another party is getting headlines?
Can the companies that suffered loss under Abbott’s clearly unconstitutional actions sue him for damages?
If we just accept that Abbott's deal with Nuevo Leon was unconstitutional, how would some company show where they suffered a loss because of the deal?
Abbott's by-the-rulebook inspections were clearly legal.
It’s like you didn’t bother to read the blog at all.
This is not just unconstitutional, it's malevolent.
And the GOP seems partially into it, and partially willing to just wince and look the other way.
"This is not just unconstitutional, it's malevolent."
You could say the same about every gun law pushed by the Democrats.
No, your whattaboutism is not on point.
Despite the conspiratorial speculations by gun folks, those are meant in good faith.
This is just sabotage.
I'm going to call BS on the 'meant in good faith' part here.
Data show that hand guns are what kills more people than any other fire arm. Not by a small amount either. Last time I looked it was 3-5% for the rifles category. And yet the majority of the gun laws specifically target a subset of the rifle category because of it's popularity. Yes it may be effective in single use instances, but it's outside several standard deviations statistically from the largest single category of fire arms deaths. If they followed the data the laws would be about hand guns.
So tell me again how targeting a subset of the smallest category of fire arms used in homicides constitutes 'meant in good faith.'?
You made a policy argument. Being wrong is not the same as being in bad faith.
If the policy argument is so blindingly stupid and incorrect that an imbecile can see that, then I can assume it's being made in bad faith.
I'm not sure if I should thank you for the support, or be upset at the (hopefully unintentional) insinuation that I'm an imbecile.
Setting aside the policy merits of the rule (or lack thereof), it seems to me the dormant commerce clause analysis here needs some work.
The primary asserted reason for the rule is to reduce the flow of illegal drugs across the border. Mexican drug cartels send their product across the Mexican border. State laws seeking to reduce the supply of that product in Texas are obviously going to focus on the Mexican border. So yes, Texas "discriminated" against international commerce insofar as it didn't set up a similar program at the New Mexico or Oklahoma borders. This alone doesn't establish a dormant commerce clause violation. See Maine v. Taylor, 477 U.S. 131, 138 (1986).
There's no real argument that the federal government totally preempts regulation of narcotics. Given that reduction of drug trafficking is a legitimate local purpose, the rule would likely survive unless there is some other solution to the problem that doesn't burden international commerce (at all or as much). And if the problem is Mexican-manufactured drugs entering Texas, it isn't immediately clear how the solution would not involve some type of intervention at the border.
It seems awfully premature to be taking victory laps over hypothetical damage awards against any future attempts by border states to combat international drug-smuggling. I feel like I read somewhere about the dangers of fair weather federalism . . .
IANAL but there is the text of Art I Sect 10:
No State shall, without the Consent of the Congress, lay any Imposts or Duties on Imports or Exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing it's inspection Laws: and the net Produce of all Duties and Imposts, laid by any State on Imports or Exports, shall be for the Use of the Treasury of the United States; and all such Laws shall be subject to the Revision and Controul of the Congress.
To me "such Laws" refers to "inspection Laws", not just imposts and duties. Let's assume right now Congress hasn't ruled out AbbottSearch. It seems that in principle they definitely could. And (maybe this is a stretch) Congress could delegate some that authority to POTUS or an agency.
Suppose Congress passed a law that states may not stop commercial vehicles engaged in interstate commerce for a search unless the search is supported by individualized probable cause. It seems to me that would be supported both by Art I Sect 10 and by their 14th amendment power to enforce the Bill of Rights on states.
The primary asserted reason for the rule is to reduce the flow of illegal drugs across the border.
Actually, this is not correct. It's been lost in a lot of the coverage, but Abbott's assertion of authority to hold up traffic coming from Mexico was expressly based upon concern over the "condition of the vehicles" being used to transport goods into the country. These were explicitly "safety inspections," not searches for contraband.
Yes, Abbott is talking a lot about drug- and immigrant-smuggling. But it seems that his advisors understood that there could be a legal vulnerability if they tried to assert legal authority to do their own contraband checks.
So, you need to start the dormant commerce clause analysis there. Not, "does the state have an interest in regulating narcotics" but, "does the state have an interest in discriminating in its safety inspections against trucks coming over the border from Mexico."
Democrats are playing the long game. Every low IQ Aztec who crosses into the United States today is at least one vote for them in 20 years.
There is a bright side to the point that this blog (like the Republican Party) attracts so many of our nation's dwindling supply of old-timey bigots: One more reason for conservatives' continuing failure at modern America's marketplace of ideas.
Carry on, clingers.
Without the bitter, clinger, white conservatives, America collapses, and you know it.
Diminution of our population of old-timey conservatives seems to correlate well with American improvement. Most of our remaining conservatives are concentrated in desolate, declining communities.
Maybe you missed the news, but your low IQ Aztecs are actually being chased to Team Red because Team Blue is being captured by the progressives. Be a racist prick if you want, but at least try to keep up.
No, they're not. Most of the Republican support is not coming from Aztecs and Mayans, but criollos.
I don't know why we can't say the exact same thing about Republican efforts to force women to bear children and then raise their children in poverty without access to quality education. It seems that the whole social program of the Republican party is to grow their own ignorant class of voters domestically.
No one is forcing women to bear children. Can any of you lefties ever argue in good faith?
Don't get knocked up, and you won't have to worry about killing your own child. It really is that simple.
Hell, most of the Federal Govt today and Federal agencies mandates are unconstitutional. I could start with the Fed or FIAT currency..not allowed for in the Constitution. Obama Care, SS, Medicare/Medicaid and on and on.
And notice there are not many trucks driving south showing the failure of deficit spending "industrial policy" so the elites can buy votes with printed money.
It is time for broad nullification by the States to shut down the Fed, provide borders, stop all this Federal Agency "mandates" and hell even the Fed's actions. Liberty trumps the SC as well.
Lol
The Volokh Conspiracy -- a blog by white, male, right-wing fringe-dwellers for America's dwindling population of disaffected, broadly intolerant, anti-government cranks.
Instead of "often libertarian," a more accurate tag for The Volokh Conspiracy would be The Culture War Casualty Daily Latherer.
Carry on, clingers.
Bill: if you'll notice, the lefties in these boards never address points like these. They either LOL or fire back an ad-hom. Don't expect anything better than that.
"The Fed and paper money are unconstitutional" merits only mockery. If you think the flag-fringe arguments that get self-described Sovereign Citizen tax scofflaws thrown in jail by judges and juries of every political persuasion deserve a substantive response, that googling is on you dude.
Fair warning: I also won't waste my time arguing when you tell me The Queen of England peddles dope and the Soviets fluoridated our water.
If California can have border checkpoints, why not Texas?
The important take away.
Leaders lead. And when things don't work, you stop and re-evaluate.
That is how smart people run their lives.
Unless your last name is Fauci, I suppose.
No, the real lesson in this embarrassing affair is that our international partners are learning that the way you deal with Republicans is to let them grandstand for a bit, but give them easy off-ramps that allow them to declare "victory" after having shot themselves in the foot.
They started figuring it out with Trump, but now apparently even on the state level in Mexico they figured out that Abbott is one of these idiot Americans that can be manipulated easily with the right optics.
Fauci is a bureaucrat. He wasn't elected to anything. Abbott was. This is so obvious as to be laughable.
If Abbot really wanted to slow things down he could expand the inspections from cargo to the carriers. Besides weight there are a myriad of safety checks that could be made. Tire tread depth on every tire, windshield obstruction, the list is endless.
But that's actually what they are doing. They are "safety" inspections. Abbott was bragging about how many unsafe vehicles his officers took out of service.
But somehow, if the governor of Nuevo Leon promises to crack down on smugglers, the unsafe trucks are OK.
It was BS all the way down.