NC House overrides Stein vetoes on ICE, DEI bills

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1–2 minutes

Summary

North Carolina House Republicans completed overrides on three Stein vetoes, enacting immigration and anti-DEI measures.

Why this matters

The votes enacted new statewide policies on immigration enforcement and diversity, equity, and inclusion in schools and universities, and moved a similar state-agency bill closer to becoming law. They also showed how attendance can determine whether a governor’s veto is sustained or overridden.

North Carolina House Republicans on Wednesday overrode Gov. Josh Stein’s vetoes of three bills requiring more cooperation with federal immigration authorities and ending diversity, equity, and inclusion programs in public schools and universities.

The House voted 71-47, along party lines, to override vetoes of Senate Bill 153, Senate Bill 227, and Senate Bill 558. The Senate had already voted to override the vetoes last summer, so all three measures are now law. They are the 10th, 11th, and 12th vetoes of Stein’s term to be overturned.

The House also voted 71-47 to override Stein’s veto of House Bill 171, which would bar diversity, equity, and inclusion programs in state agencies. That bill still requires a Senate override vote.

Veto overrides require support from three-fifths of members present and voting. With all 120 House members present, that threshold is 72 votes. But Reps. Carla Cunningham, D-Mecklenburg, and Shelly Willingham, D-Edgecombe, were absent, lowering the threshold to 71, the number of seats Republicans hold.

Both lawmakers had attended a House Rules Committee meeting earlier Wednesday. House Democratic Leader Robert Reives said members had not received an explanation.

Republican leaders limited debate under House rules, allowing one speaker from each side for up to three minutes on each override. House Speaker Destin Hall said, “Frankly, there’s nothing in here that we’ve not debated at length already.”

Senate Bill 153 requires additional cooperation with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement by local law enforcement. It also requires the departments of Health and Human Services and Commerce, the Housing Finance Agency, and local housing agencies to check immigration status before providing certain forms of assistance, including food, rent, housing, medication, and inpatient psychiatric care. The law also removes governmental immunity for local governments with a “sanctuary” policy or that refuse to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement, and it bars sanctuary policies at state universities.

Senate Bill 227 and Senate Bill 558 end diversity, equity, and inclusion policies in K-12 public schools and public higher education, respectively. House Bill 171 would apply similar restrictions to state agencies.

Senate Bill 50, which would expand who can carry a concealed handgun without a permit, was not taken up Wednesday.

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