By Mark Sherman
Abilene Reporter-News
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court will referee another major clash between the Obama administration and the states, this one over Arizona’s crackdown on undocumented immigrants. The case could add fuel to the partisan split over tough state immigration laws backed by Republicans but challenged by the administration.
Like last month’s arguments over President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul, the immigration case is expected to be decided at the end of June.
Wednesday’s arguments will focus on whether states can adopt their own immigration measures to deal with an estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants, or whether the federal government has almost exclusive authority in the area of immigration. Arizona was the first of a half-dozen states to enact laws intended to drive undocumented immigrants elsewhere, a policy known as “attrition by enforcement.” Even where blocked by courts, these laws have already had an impact on farm fields and school classrooms as fewer immigrants showed up.
“If the federal government had been doing and would continue to do its job in securing the border here in southern Arizona, this would not be an issue. Unfortunately, they failed to do that so Arizona stepped up and said, ‘We want to be partners. Here’s a role we think we can play,’ ” said Sheriff Larry Dever of Cochise County, which shares an 83.5-mile border with Mexico.
The administration says it has both increased border enforcement to keep people from entering illegally in the first place and picked up the pace of deportations. In its first two years, the administration deported nearly 800,000 people, far higher on a yearly basis than President George W. Bush’s administration.
The Obama administration sued to block the Arizona law soon after its enactment two years ago. Federal courts have refused to let four key provisions take effect: requiring police, while enforcing other laws, to question a person’s immigration status if officers suspect he is in the country illegally; requiring all immigrants to obtain or carry immigration registration papers; making it a state criminal offense for an undocumented immigrant to seek work or hold a job and allowing police to arrest suspected undocumented immigrants without warrants.
Civil rights groups that mounted legal challenges independent of the administration’s say the laws encourage racial profiling and ethnic stereotyping. “It blurs what used to be a very bright line, that you can’t stop someone and ask for papers based just on how they look,” said Anthony Romero, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union. “But the impact is on citizens as much as immigrants. It’s a dragnet approach that sweeps up law-abiding American citizens based on the color of their skin or ethnic origins.” In Arizona, around the time Gov. Jan Brewer signed the immigration law, lifelong Arizona resident Jim Shee twice confronted police officers who came to his car window asking to see his “papers.”
Shee, 72, is of Chinese and Spanish descent. “I’m not blond-haired and blueeyed. My grandkids aren’t blond-haired and blueeyed. I don’t want to see this happening to them,” Shee said.
Copyright 2012 The E.W. Scripps Company