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Rep. Luis Gutierrez |
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Rep. Raul Grijalva |
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Reps. Luis Gutierrez and Raul Grijalva Demand Obama Block Arizona Bill
WASHINGTON
(By
Abby Sewell, Medill News Service)
April 21, 2010
―
Hispanic leaders in the House of Representatives called Tuesday for
President Barack Obama Tuesday to act against Arizona's anti-illegal
immigration legislation and to throw his weight behind a comprehensive
immigration overhaul.
Reps. Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill., and Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., demanded a
halt to the bill that passed Arizona's Senate Monday. The state's House
of Representatives passed it last week. If Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer signs
it into law, the bill would require immigrants to carry alien
registration cards with them at all times and police to check people's
immigration status whenever there's "reasonable suspicion" they are in
the country illegally.
Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.), urge
companies to stop doing business in his
state in protest of the law.
There has to be an economic sanction
for this, the congressman said. Our
economic sanction is: Do not do business
with a state that is propagating the
idea that separate but equal treatment
under the law can be codified.
Grijalva and Gutierrez said if Brewer, a
Republican, signs the bill into law, the
Obama administration should step in to
stop it.
"The president of the United States
should simply say, 'On the issue of
immigration, the Constitution is clear,
my power is clear I'm going to
regulate immigration in the United
States from a federal level,'" Gutierrez
said.
Thomas Saenz, president of the Mexican
American Legal Defense and Educational
Fund who appeared with the congressmen
at a news conference, said the
Department of Homeland Security could
end agreements that allow Arizona law
enforcement to police immigration laws
or the Justice Department could
challenge the initiative as a violation
of civil rights law.
An Obama administration official said
the White House is reviewing the Arizona
legislation.
Even without action from the White
House, Saenz said the Arizona law would
face challenges in federal court like
those that ultimately brought down a
similar initiative enacted in California
in 1994. He said the fund has already
been contacted by potential clients in
Arizona.
"Absolutely, there will be a legal
challenge," Saenz said.
Gutierrez also blasted the president for
failing to push for comprehensive
immigration legislation. Sens. Lindsey
Graham, R-S.C., and Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.,
rolled out a framework in March, and
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.,
told immigration advocates at an April
10 rally in Las Vegas he would make
immigration a priority.
Gutierrez said there's a narrow window
to introduce a bill in the Senate
between Memorial Day and July 4, when he
projected the Senate will turn its
attention to hearings for Obama's
nominee to replace Supreme Court Justice
John Paul Stevens.
However, Gutierrez said Tuesday he
thinks the administration doesn't see an
immigration overhaul as a priority.
In a written response, the White House
pledged its commitment to moving an
immigration bill forward this year and
said it's been working closely with the
Senate.
"Senator Schumer and Graham were both in
the Oval Office last month talking with
the president on how to move forward
together, including strategies for
securing additional Republican support,"
the statement said.
White House spokesman Nick Shapiro also
said via e-mail that Obama called Sen.
Scott Brown, R-Mass., from Air Force One
Tuesday to discuss immigration
legislation.