Showing posts with label Arizona. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arizona. Show all posts

Wednesday, 7 July 2010

Suing Arizona Adds Fuel To Hot Immigration Debate



We are participate Suing Arizona Adds Fuel To Hot Immigration Debate
The Justice Department's decision Tuesday to file suit against Arizona's controversial immigration law is likely to deepen divisions on an issue that has already become highly contentious.

"I'm a strong opponent of it," Tamar Jacoby, president of ImmigrationWorks USA, says of the lawsuit. Jacoby's business-backed group favors changes in immigration law that take into account labor force needs.

"They're stirring up a hornet's nest," she says. "Only the federal government can fix what's wrong with immigration — but not with a lawsuit."

Despite months of backstage negotiations in the Senate, Congress appears hopelessly divided on immigration, with some members favoring an approach that would allow a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants already in the country and others seeking much harsher penalties for illegal immigrants and those who hire them. The looming midterm elections don't make finding a solution any easier.

And that political tension may be exacerbated by the Justice Department lawsuit, which seeks an injunction to block implementation of the Arizona law. The law calls on police to check the legal status of individuals who they have reason to suspect are in the country illegally after they have been arrested or stopped for some other infraction. Polls show it is broadly popular both within the state and nationwide. Several states are considering passing similar legislation.

The President's Political Problem

President Obama has been in a box when it comes to immigration. He has been unable to persuade Congress to consider seriously legislation that will secure the borders, without cracking down harshly on illegal immigrants.



The Legal Debate

The federal government's legal case turns on the question of pre-emption — the notion that only Washington has the authority to set immigration policy. The Justice Department's complaint says that Arizona's statute, which Republican Gov. Jan Brewer signed in April, "is preempted by federal law and therefore violates the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution."


EnlargePete Souza/The White House via Getty Images
Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer and President Obama at the White House on June 3.
Enforcement of immigration law might seem like a natural area for federal law to take precedence. "Very quickly, we would end up with 50 states with 50 different types of immigration law," says Ali Noorani, executive director of the National Immigration Forum, an immigrant advocacy organization. "To avoid that catastrophe, the Obama administration has stepped in and said there's one immigration law, and that's the federal law."

But in recent years states have passed hundreds of laws addressing immigration — laws that survived earlier court challenges raising pre-emption concerns. And the Arizona statute was crafted specifically with this constitutional question in mind. Some of its most contentious language was derived directly from existing federal laws.

"What the federal government might have to argue, in effect, is that it is not [its] policy to enforce federal immigration law," says Steven Camarota, director of research at the Center for Immigration Studies, which favors stricter enforcement of immigration laws. "They would be on stronger ground saying that Arizona is doing something contrary to the policy of the federal government."

Other states are considering legislation that would imitate Arizona's recent immigration law. Some are further along than others. In these 10, legislators are taking a serious look at the issue:

Colorado

Idaho

Minnesota

Missouri

North Carolina

Oklahoma

South Carolina

Texas

Utah

Virginia

Source: Federation for American Immigration Reform

Potential Fallout From The Suit

The arguments made by the Justice Department in its complaint are not so different from challenges that have been brought against the Arizona law by private groups such as the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund and the American Civil Liberties Union.

But having the federal government itself weigh in and say that immigration is a national concern over which states have limited purview may hold more sway with a judge.

"My sense is that the issue here of pre-emption really goes to the core of the role of the federal government," says Clarissa Martinez De Castro, director of immigration and national campaigns at the National Council of La Raza, a Latino civil rights and advocacy group. "There's really no alternative than for the Justice Department to intervene."

Regardless of the outcome in court, however, supporters of the Arizona law predict there will be political fallout.

"Politically, it is odd, because going after the Arizona law is going to outrage the average of 65 percent of Americans in polls that support it," says Bob Dane, spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration Reform, which helped draft the Arizona law. "It's going to inject immigration into campaigns from coast to coast, which is going to endanger mostly moderate Democrats."

Obama has been opposed to the law from the start, pleading publicly with Brewer to veto it just hours before she, in fact, signed it. But the lawsuit may further complicate the president's desire to find some daylight between seemingly diametrically opposed camps in Congress on the immigration issue.

"I'm no fan of the [Arizona] law," says Jacoby, the ImmigrationWorks USA president, "but I'm very frightened that the lawsuit will polarize the debate to the point of no return."

Coppied by 2010 NPR

Tuesday, 6 July 2010

Obama administration to sue Arizona over migrant laws


Part of a large steel fence separating Mexico and Arizona. The state is the biggest entry point into the US for illegal immigrants. Photograph: Larry W. Smith/EPA

Special announced Obama administration to sue Arizona over migrant laws
Republicans condemn White House move to reassert its authority on immigration policy

The Obama administration has moved to reassert its authority on immigration policy by suing Arizona state over its draconian plans to curb illegal immigration.

The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Phoenix, argues that Arizona's law requiring state and local police to question anyone they reasonably suspect of being an illegal immigrant undermines the federal government's authority.

"In our constitutional system, the federal government has pre-eminent authority to regulate immigration matters," the lawsuit says. "This authority derives from the United States constitution and numerous acts of Congress. The nation's immigration laws reflect a careful and considered balance of national law enforcement, foreign relations, and humanitarian interests."

The government is seeking an injunction to delay the 29 July implementation of the law until the case is resolved. It ultimately wants the law declared invalid. Mexico as well as several civil liberties groups have opposed the Arizona measure, and several other legal challenges are pending in federal court in the state.

Republicans condemned the lawsuit, saying the law had not yet entered into force so the challenge was premature. They also argued that the Arizona law was justified as the federal government had failed to deal with the issue.

"The Obama administration has not done everything it can do to protect the people of Arizona from the violence and crime illegal immigration brings to our state," the two Republican senators from Arizona, John McCain and Jon Kyl, said in a statement.

Arizona passed the law after years of frustration over problems associated with illegal immigration, including drug trafficking and kidnappings. The state is the biggest entry point into the US for illegal immigrants, and is home to an estimated 460,000 of them.

The White House fears that the Arizona law could lead to a patchwork of different laws passed by various states and local authorities. Last week, Fremont, a small town in Nebraska, voted to in effect banish all illegal immigrants.

Coppied by Guardian News and Media Limited 2010