More States Duplicate Arizona's
Tougher Immigration Rules
NEW YORK CITY &
SANTA FE, NM
(By
Laura Litvan , Bloomberg)
December 29, 2010
— Arizona’s get-tough approach to
illegal immigration has sparked
court challenges likely to take
years to resolve. Randy Terrill, a
Republican state lawmaker from
Oklahoma, won’t be waiting to see
what judges decide.
Terrill is among dozens of state
legislators across the U.S. drafting
measures that match or go further
than the Arizona law, which requires
police to check the immigration
status of people stopped for
questioning. He’s readying
legislation to allow Oklahoma
authorities to seize and keep the
vehicle of anyone found to be
harboring an illegal immigrant who
is a passenger, regardless of
whether smuggling is suspected. The
measure would categorize
undocumented immigrants as “human
contraband.”
Elsewhere, Missouri and Mississippi
are among states where lawmakers
intend to offer bills similar to
Arizona’s “probable cause” law. And
legislators in several states want
to require employers to verify the
immigration status of workers.
The state-by-state efforts
underscore the federal gridlock on
immigration policy. “States are
stepping in where the federal
government can’t or won’t act,” said
Terrill.
About 300 immigration-related bills
were introduced in statehouses in
2005, said Ann Morse, who directs
the Immigrant Policy Project for the
National Conference of State
Legislatures. In each of the last
two years, the figure reached about
1,500, she said.
In 2011, state legislators could
push the number higher. “Every
indication I get is, they’re not
done,” Morse said.
Republican Gains
Republican gains in state
legislatures will drive some of the
proposals. In November’s elections,
the party won enough seats to take
control of 20 additional statehouse
chambers. With these pickups,
Republicans now control the
legislative branch in 25 states, up
from 14, according to the Denver,
Colorado-based NCSL.
In some states, newly-elected
Republican governors want to press
ahead with more stringent
immigration laws. Governor-elect
Nikki Haley of South Carolina said
she wants to sign into law a measure
like Arizona’s next year. She also
wants to boost state funding for
immigration enforcement and press
for increased deportation of illegal
immigrants within her state’s
borders.
Florida’s Rick Scott campaigned on
copying Arizona’s approach, as did
Georgia’s Nathan Deal -- who also
wants to revoke birthright U.S.
citizenship for babies of illegal
immigrants.
In other states, Democratic chief
executives may find themselves at
odds with Republican-controlled
legislatures over immigration
policy. Governor Jay Nixon of
Missouri and Governor-elect John
Hickenlooper of Colorado have said
they oppose an Arizona-type
“probable cause” law that some
Republican legislators in their
states have suggested they might
propose.
Washington Inaction
Behind the push at the state level
is the inaction in Washington. The
last broad rewrite of federal
immigration policy was in 1986. In
2007, an effort by Republican
President George W. Bush for a
comprehensive revision collapsed,
with Republican lawmakers and some
Democrats calling for increased
security at the U.S.-Mexico border
before Congress should tackle the
status of undocumented workers.
The Department of Homeland Security
estimates that the number of illegal
immigrants in the U.S. declined to
10.8 million in January 2009, the
latest figure available, from 11.6
million in January 2008.
DREAM Act
President Barack Obama has yet to
propose a restructuring of
immigration policy. A piecemeal
approach tried by congressional
Democrats failed on Dec. 19 when the
Senate thwarted a bill, the
so-called DREAM Act, to allow legal
status for some illegal immigrants
attending college or in the U.S.
military.
The bill was blocked by Senate
Republicans and a handful of
Democrats. And with Republicans
taking control of the House in
January, chances for changes to
immigration law beyond tougher
enforcement measures will drop
significantly.
The Arizona law serving as a
template for lawmakers in other
states faces a challenge from the
Obama administration, which argues
that the statute unconstitutionally
veers into matters of federal
jurisdiction. A federal judge has
issued a stay on enforcement of
parts of the law.
States where the “probable cause”
measure could pass next year include
South Carolina, Florida, Mississippi
and Georgia, said Tamar Jacoby,
president of ImmigrationWorks USA, a
network of business groups that
favors more legal immigration.
‘Looks Plausible’
“Those are states where I see
legislators that have a track record
for doing this type of thing, who
are making serious preparations and
where the political landscape looks
plausible,” Jacoby said.
In Texas, one legislator in November
camped out for two days outside the
House chamber so she could be first
in line to file an Arizona-like
measure.
The U.S. Supreme Court this month
heard arguments in a challenge to
another Arizona law that revokes the
corporate charters of companies that
hire illegal immigrants. The 2007
law also requires employers to
participate in E-Verify, a system
designed to confirm worker
eligibility for employment through
federal databases. The system is
voluntary under federal law after
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the
nation’s largest business lobby,
questioned its accuracy and said
errors may force companies to fire
legal immigrants.
Mississippi and South Carolina have
joined Arizona in approving a
mandatory-use law for all employers.
States that could join them in 2011
include Georgia, Virginia and Texas,
said Van Esser, chief of membership
services at NumbersUSA, which
supports tougher enforcement
measures.
Central Source
Many of the efforts are getting help
from a central source, the
Immigration Reform Law Institute. At
the legal arm of the Federation for
American Immigration Reform, a group
that wants to crack down on illegal
immigration, the institute’s
attorneys are drafting measures.
“I’ve been personally approached by
lawmakers from all over the
country,” said Kris Kobach, a
counsel for the group who helped to
draft Arizona’s “probable cause”
law.
Combating their efforts are groups
like the American Civil Liberties
Union and the Police Foundation, an
association that says police
departments will be overburdened if
they take on the responsibility for
enforcing immigration laws.
On another front, lawmakers in at
least a dozen states working with a
new group called State Legislators
for Legal Immigration will introduce
bills to try to push into the courts
the issue of automatic U.S
citizenship rights for children born
in this country of illegal-immigrant
parents. That right is afforded
under the U.S. Constitution’s 14th
Amendment.
Birthright Citizenship
Past efforts to take on birthright
citizenship have failed. Still, the
measures send a message about
dissatisfaction with lack of federal
action on immigration, said Morse.
Some states want to advance
legislation that denies children of
illegal immigrants access to state
benefits. The measures may also
require them to have different birth
certificates that identify their
parents as undocumented immigrants.
“We shouldn’t be granting
citizenship” to children of “someone
who has entered our country
illegally,” said state
Representative Daryl Metcalfe of
Pennsylvania, who leads State
Legislators for Legal Immigration.