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Missouri House approves $2.2 million to send National Guard and state troopers to Mexico border

The Missouri State Capitol on Wednesday, Jan. 24, 2024, in Jefferson City. Gov. Mike Parson will deliver his last State of the State address today.
Eric Lee
/
St. Louis Public Radio
The Missouri State Capitol on Wednesday, Jan. 24, 2024, in Jefferson City. Gov. Mike Parson will deliver his last State of the State address today.

With bipartisan support, Missouri representatives voted 122-12 to approve the $2.2 million bill, which now goes to the Senate. The initial deployment of the troops will last at least 90 days but could be extended.

The Missouri House voted Thursday to fund Gov. Mike Parson’s plan to send about 200 National Guard members and up to 22 Missouri State Highway Patrol officers to the Texas-Mexico border.

With bipartisan support, representatives voted 122-12 to approve the $2.2 million bill, which now goes to the Senate.

Parson announced in February his plan to send personnel as a response to Texas’ request for aid.

Troops will arrive in Texas this month, Parson said.

While the state has existing money available for the plan, Parson asked for a supplemental budget bill to backfill that funding in case of an emergency.

House Budget Chair Cody Smith, R-Carthage, sponsored the legislation.

“This is Missouri's response to that call for assistance from the state of Texas,” Smith said Tuesday.

But Rep. LaKeySha Bosley, D-St. Louis, said there is a lot the legislature can do to protect Missourians and providing this funding wasn’t serving that purpose.

“We're always talking about making sure we take care of Missourians. We are not doing that with this bill. We are trying to take care of somebody else's problem,” Bosley said.

Rep. Betsy Fogle, D-Springfield, said the question on this bill isn’t whether to send troops to Texas. That was happening with or without the passage of this bill, but whether to have enough money budgeted for emergencies.

“The question that we're asking today is, ‘Do we want to give an additional $2 million, knowing that the troops are already going, to go in case another crisis like a tornado, or some other natural disaster hits our state,” Fogle said.

The action comes as action over the border has stalled in Congress.

The initial deployment of the troops will last at least 90 days but could be extended, Parson said.

Copyright 2024 St. Louis Public Radio. To see more, visit St. Louis Public Radio.

Sarah Kellogg is St. Louis Public Radio’s Statehouse and Politics Reporter, taking on the position in August 2021. Sarah is from the St. Louis area and even served as a newsroom intern for St. Louis Public Radio back in 2015.
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