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Gov. Stein considers immigration, concealed carry bills

Gov. Stein considers immigration, concealed carry bills

Yahoo13-06-2025
RALEIGH, N.C. () – North Carolina lawmakers approved several heavily debated bills Tuesday and Wednesday, sending them to Governor Josh Stein's desk for approval or veto.
The Freedom to Carry NC bill, SB 50, passed the House with a 59-48 vote on Wednesday.
The legislation would allow gun owners to carry a concealed firearm without a concealed handgun permit, with exceptions for convicted criminals. Current law requires concealed carry permit applicants to be at least 21 years old, while SB 50 drops the age to 18 years old.
If signed into law, North Carolina would be the 30th state to allow for 'constitutional carry.'
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Lawmakers also passed two contentious bills concerning state immigration regulations, as against Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The measure from the House would require sheriffs to verify the immigration status of detainees in their custody and notify ICE officials if the person is undocumented.
Republicans in the Senate created the North Carolina Border Protection Act, requiring state agencies to audit families that receive publicly funded benefits such as housing assistance, Medicaid or unemployment to ensure they are American citizens.
Governor Stein has 10 days from when the legislation reaches his desk to sign the bill, veto the measure, or do nothing and allow the legislation to become law.
A spokesperson for the governor's office told Queen City News' reporting partner in Raleigh on Wednesday that Stein was still reviewing the bills. They said on the topic of immigration, 'he has made it clear that if someone commits a crime and they are here illegally, they should be deported.'
GOP lawmakers are close to a supermajority, but the House would need every Republican and at least one Democrat to vote for a bill to override a veto.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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