The U.S. vs. Arizona: A Primer for the High Court’s Big Day on Immigration – COLORLINES
*Mexikaresistance.com Note: History is being re-written before our very eyes. Now white americans are the "native" people and Nikan Titlakah / Timazewaltin are "foreign." The more Indigenous you appear, the more suspect you become.The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on Arizona’s trendsetting and controversial anti-immigrant law SB 1070 today. It’s the culmination of a legal battle for which both immigrant rights advocates and immigration restrictionists have been itching for two years, ever since Arizona became the first state in the nation to make it a crime to be an undocumented immigrant. Below, Hatty Lee’s infographics break down what’s at stake.
The Supreme Court will attempt to settle a debate raging across the country: When it comes to immigration enforcement, where does the federal government’s territory end and state power begin? Or, as SCOTUSblog’s Lyle Denniston puts it: Who gets to regulate the lives of this country’s immigrants? Today’s proceedings are the final oral arguments of this session for Supreme Court justices. But it will surely not be the last word on this issue.
At the heart of the law is the concept of “enforcement through attrition,” or as it’s been taken up by presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney, “self-deportation.” The theory posits that states that criminalize every aspect of life for undocumented immigrants don’t need to actively kick out immigrants. Lawmakers can make life oppressive enough that immigrants will leave the state on their own. The concept was pushed by Kris Kobach, whose official title as Kansas Secretary of State has been eclipsed by his legislative engineering of SB 1070. When SB 1070 was signed into law two years ago, it became a showpiece for the movement, and a model for other states.
Kobach, working with a right-wing network of anti-immigrant forces, has successfully supported five other states that have enacted SB 1070 copycat bills: Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, South Carolina and Utah. The federal government has open lawsuits against Alabama, South Carolina and Utah.
The Obama administration has cracked down on enforcement-giddy states even as it has strengthened its own enforcement apparatus. Since stepping into office President Obama has deported record numbers of immigrants every year, for a total of more than 1 million deportations over his tenure. He’s been able to do this in large part through initiatives like 287(g) and Secure Communities, which interlace local law enforcement work with immigration enforcement. When states and localities attempted to distance themselves from these programs, the Obama administration announced that states’ cooperation with Secure Communities was mandatory.
“It’s not like the federal government is being soft on immigration,” Kevin Johnson, Dean of UC Davis School of Law said when the Supreme Court announced it would take up the case. Johnson added that the apparent tension doesn’t resolve the basic constitutional questions at play. “It’s different than allowing states and localities from coast to coast to have their own immigration enforcement force at work.”
FULL ARTICLE: The U.S. vs. Arizona: A Primer for the High Court’s Big Day on Immigration – COLORLINES.
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