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Controversial US immigration clause allowed to stand

Monday, 25 June, 2012 -- Source

 

US President Barack Obama (AFP/File, Brendan Smialowski)

 

WASHINGTON — The US Supreme Court struck down most of Arizona's controversial new immigration law on Monday but let stand a key provision allowing officers to do spot checks of people's identity papers.

 

Opponents of the law, which is strongly backed by Arizona's Republican Governor Jan Brewer, warn that it could lead to racial profiling and infringes on the constitutional rights of America's citizens.

 

US President Barack Obama voiced concern that the top court failed to invalidate the key clause, even as he welcomed being vindicated on the wider issue of state interference into federal law on immigration matters.

 

"No American should ever live under a cloud of suspicion just because of what they look like," Obama said in a statement, adding that the judgment made it even more vital to tackle comprehensive immigration reform.

 

The Arizona law has aroused intense controversy because of a particular provision, 2(B), that requires police to stop and demand proof of citizenship of anyone they suspect of being illegal, even without probable cause.

 

In a victory for Obama's Republicans opponents, justices unanimously refused to strike down the key clause, as they said it was unclear, before the law's actual implementation, that it raised constitutional concerns.

 

"It was improper to enjoin 2(B) before the state courts had an opportunity to construe it and without some showing that 2(B)'s enforcement in fact conflicts with federal immigration law and its objectives," said the ruling, which left the matter open to future challenges.

 

Justices rejected a series of other provisions, including those that would have criminalized immigrants for failing to register with the federal government, or for seeking work or working without proper documents.

 

They also struck down a clause that would have allowed police to arrest those suspected of being deportable without a warrant.

 

Frank Jannuzi, head of Amnesty International's Washington office, welcomed the broader tenor of the ruling, but said: "We are disappointed that the court failed to draw a clearer line in the sand against racial profiling."

 

Senator Charles Schumer, chairman of the Senate subcommittee on immigration and a senior Democrat, called it "as strong a repudiation of the Arizona law as one could expect" before it goes into effect.

 

"The court is sending a stern warning to Arizona that the provision allowing local law enforcement to check people's immigration documents cannot be implemented in a discriminatory or draconian way, or it will be thrown out like the rest of the law."

 

But Brewer hailed a "legal victory" and Obama's challenger for the White House in November, Mitt Romney, used the ruling to attack the president for making broken immigration promises.

 

"As candidate Obama, he promised to present an immigration plan during his first year in office. But four years later, we are still waiting," Romney said in a statement.

 

Obama's so far unfulfilled 2008 vow to bring more than 10 million illegal immigrants out of the shadows, which is opposed by conservatives, is emerging as a key issue in the 2012 election, as he courts vital Hispanic voters.

 

Earlier this month, Obama infuriated illegal immigration hawks by offering those brought to America illegally, between the ages of 16 and 30, work permits and a two year stay of deportation proceedings.

 

The Supreme Court ruling on immigration comes amid fevered anticipation of an even weightier decision on the constitutionality of Obama's signature domestic policy achievement, health care reform.

 

That ruling, which also has major implications for Obama's re-election chances, is now expected to come on Thursday.

 

Lower courts last year opted to strike sections of the Arizona law they said would place a burden on legal resident aliens in the Mexico-border state, where a third of the 6.6 million people are foreign-born and more than 400,000 are illegal immigrants.

 

Brewer, who earlier this year was caught on camera pointing her finger in Obama's face in what looked to be a testy exchange on an airport tarmac, asked the top court to reinstate the suspended sections.

 

The broad decision, written by Justice Anthony Kennedy, was approved by five votes to three. The move to uphold, for now, the status checks was unanimous.

 

Mexico and 17 other countries have filed arguments with the Supreme Court opposing the law. At least 36 US states have introduced legislation with elements similar to those in Arizona.

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A big win for the Obama administration

 

By , Monday, June 25, 12:00 PM

Source

 

By throwing out most of the anti-Latino Arizona immigration law and neutering the rest, the Supreme Courtstruck a rare blow for fairness and justice on Monday. Let’s hope this is the beginning of a streak.

 

Let’s also hope that Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., who sided with the 5 to 3 majority in this case, likes the view from the liberals’ end of the bench. They could use his vote on the health care reform ruling, expected to be announced Thursday.

 

In a perfect world, the court would have definitively eliminated the most notorious section of the Arizona law: the requirement that police check the immigration status of anyone who is detained. Because of its chilling invocation of police-state tactics, this became known as the “papers, please” provision.

 

The court ruled that it is too soon to invalidate this part of the law but significantly narrowed the measure’s scope — and practically dared Arizona officials to step out of line. “This opinion does not foreclose other preemption and constitutional challenges to the law as interpreted and applied after it goes into effect,” the court wrote. Translation: We’ll be watching closely.

 

Other parts of the law were less publicized but equally onerous and un-American. These provisions, happily, are now history.

 

Even more gratifying is the court’s reinforcement of an obvious principle: The federal government has the responsibility for setting immigration policy, not the states. We do not need — and, thanks to this ruling, will not have — 50 sets of laws specifying who gets to live in this country and who doesn’t.

 

The Arizona law sought to make it a state crime to fail to have proper immigration papers; in other words, failing to produce the right documents when asked could have subjected a person not just to deportation but to criminal penalties. The court ruled that this was preempted by federal law, which imposes no such sanctions.

 

Arizona’s draconian statute also made it against the law for an undocumented immigrant to look for work. The court noted that existing federal law already addresses the employment issue but specifically puts the onus on employers, not workers.

 

It is “illegal for employers to knowingly hire, recruit, refer, or continue to employ unauthorized workers . . . and requires employers to verify prospective employees’ employment authorization status,” the court said. “The correct instruction to draw . . . is that Congress decided it would be inappropriate to impose criminal penalties on unauthorized employees.”

 

And in a provision that, to my thinking, was even more oppressive than “papers, please,” the Arizona statute gave police the authority to arrest anyone — without a warrant — suspected of some “public offense” that makes the person liable to deportation. The court recognized, quite logically, that this is a license for police to arrest suspected illegal immigrants indiscriminately, based solely on the possibility that they might be here without the proper documents.

 

As the court noted in striking down this provision, “The result could be unnecessary harassment of some aliens (for instance, a veteran, college student, or someone assisting with a criminal investigation) whom federal officials determine should not be removed.”

 

The majority opinion, written by Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, points out something that many who seek to participate in the immigration debate fail to understand: “As a general rule, it is not a crime for a removable alien to remain present in the United States.”

 

That’s right. It’s not a crime for “illegal” immigrants to live and work here without the proper documents. By “here” I mean all 50 states. The United States is one country with one immigration policy, and the Supreme Court means to keep it this way.

 

That’s why analysts who see this as a split ruling with “something for both sides” are wrong. The Obama administration won across the board on its central contention, which is that Arizona was trying to usurp a federal prerogative. This has huge implications for the other states, such as South Carolina and Georgia, that are also trying to design their own immigration policies.

 

There are political implications as well. Mitt Romney, who is struggling to reduce President Obama’s huge lead among Latino voters, once referred to the Arizona law as “a model.” Romney reacted to Monday’s decision by reiterating that “each state has the duty and the right” to protect the nation’s borders.

 

Actually, no. Romney should read the ruling.

 

eugenerobinson@washpost.com


Eugene Robinson  Opinion Writer
FM

Obama has outflanked the entire GOP, now even Marco Rubio has to go back in a corner.

 

The extreme Right will never win an election again in the USA, the Reps need to encourage more moderate voices.  Anyone who panders to them will lose.  Romney lacked conviction and allowed himself to be pushed Right by the TEA party, now he will pay.  When a dumb ass and political bottom-feeder like Trump is given so much airtime on their platform, it's a shamefully sad day for GOP politics.  Him and Santorum were total turn off, the only attractive with Trump is his hairstyle.

FM
Originally Posted by baseman:

Obama has outflanked the entire GOP, now even Marco Rubio has to go back in a corner.

 

The extreme Right will never win an election again in the USA, the Reps need to encourage more moderate voices.  Anyone who panders to them will lose.  Romney lacked conviction and allowed himself to be pushed Right by the TEA party, now he will pay.  When a dumb ass and political bottom-feeder like Trump is given so much airtime on their platform, it's a shamefully sad day for GOP politics.  Him and Santorum were total turn off, the only attractive with Trump is his hairstyle.

This is too far out from November to predict winners and losers. The nation has been split down the middle between conservatives and liberals with independents  (a growing minority) making up a mediating road.

 

The middle is where the outcome will be settled and these can give the 2 to five percent that will make the difference.

 

Hispanics were never fully in the republican camp for immigration alone to be the defining issue for them. They like most minority groups always were the huddled masses for the democratic party.

 

Only Asians ( mainly indo asians) of this group trend Republicans and for what reason ( except to be different)  I do not know.

 

The fight is for the middle and Romney is behind the curve here. His fight will be hard but he can make up from poaching from this middle group of independents ( mainly white women and young middle class white kids)

FM

While the elections is about four month away, Mitt Romney has yet to articulate a firm policy to hold the nation's attention.

 

President Barack Obama is far more focused on the issues.

 

FM

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