Texas Gov. Greg Abbott cannot reasonably be accused of always playing to his party's lowest common denominator.
That territory is typically occupied by his more provocative Republican peers, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Attorney General Ken Paxton — not to mention his recently routed primary challengers.
But his recent announcement that Texas would be chartering buses and offering to bring migrants at the border straight to the steps of the U.S. Capitol in Washington — where the Biden administration "will be able to more immediately address the needs of the people that they are allowing to come across our border," he said — played like red meat in a media environment that often glosses over nuance and mistakes meaning.
"Texas Governor Targets Migrants in Anticipation of Influx at Border," read a headline in the New York Times.
The subheadline, of course, acknowledged that the expected surge in illegal immigration is the direct result of a change in the Biden administration's policy — the announced end of Title 42, the emergency health order used during the pandemic to turn away migrants at the border.
It also clarified that Abbott's fierce-sounding plan to ferry migrants to the nation's capital is, in fact, completely voluntary.
Transporting migrants around the state of Texas is something border cities already do, Abbott explained.
"So I said I've got a better idea: As opposed to busing these people to San Antonio, let's continue the ride all the way to Washington, D.C.," he added.