6/21/2017 - Angela
Morabito Townhall.com
In
June 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down large parts of an Arizona state
law intended to give local law enforcement the power to enforce federal
immigration laws.
The
ruling in Arizona v. United States held that three sections of S.B. 1070
were pre-empted by federal immigration law. The Obama administration, which
opposed the Arizona law, along with advocates for open borders, hailed the
ruling, contending that the U.S. couldn’t very well have 50 different
immigration policies.
Now,
five years later the script has flipped.
Many
of the same folks who railed against a single state setting its own immigration
policy are now vehemently supportive of states — and even towns, cities and
counties — thumbing their noses at federal immigration law and providing
“sanctuary” to illegal aliens.
These
hypocritical sanctuary scofflaws are now facing some long-overdue pushback.
Their double standard is showing, and people who favor the rule of law –
including legal immigrants – are using online advocacy to push back.
First,
the scores of sanctuary cities and jurisdictions, large and small now face the
very real threat of being declared ineligible by the Trump administration for
at least three different federal Justice Department law-enforcement grants.
The
threat of losing those funding streams has given at least some of these
sanctuary cities and counties pause to reconsider. The Washington Times
reported June 2 that 10 jurisdictions have been told by the Justice Department
that they have until the end of June to certify that they’re in compliance with
Section 1373 of the U.S. Code relating to illegal immigration. If they don’t
meet that deadline, they risk losing eligibility for those grants.
At
the same time, average Americans who support U.S. national sovereignty and the
rule of law are stepping up and doing their part to make it known that they
oppose the cities, counties and states where they live harboring illegal
immigrants. Sanctuary status does next to nothing for illegal immigrants who do
not commit additional crimes. Sanctuary status only helps those who are here
illegally AND arrested on additional criminal charges.
Utilizing
online petitioning platforms such as StandUnited.org, Americans are making it
known to their elected officials that they object to the defiance of federal
immigration laws.
In so
doing, they’re helping President Trump fulfill his campaign promise to
crackdown on illegal immigration and reassert national sovereignty with respect
to who gets to come into the country and who doesn’t.
The first such petition calling for the defunding of sanctuary
jurisdictions went online some months ago. At the time, we weren’t sure whether
it would resonate, but it has grown steadily since then and now boasts more
than 43,000 signatures.
Activists also have taken matters into their own hands with pre-emptive strikes in Traverse City, Mich., and Troy, N.Y. These jurisdictions aren’t sanctuary cities — at least not yet — but they are threatening to start shielding illegal immigrants, so locals there are using petitions to stop those harmful policies before they start. Petitions have also been launched against sanctuary policies in Winston-Salem, N.C., and Richmond, Va.
Activists also have taken matters into their own hands with pre-emptive strikes in Traverse City, Mich., and Troy, N.Y. These jurisdictions aren’t sanctuary cities — at least not yet — but they are threatening to start shielding illegal immigrants, so locals there are using petitions to stop those harmful policies before they start. Petitions have also been launched against sanctuary policies in Winston-Salem, N.C., and Richmond, Va.
Contrary
to what advocates for open borders might want casual observers to believe,
neither the people behind these petitions, nor the folks who sign onto them,
are anti-immigrant. What they are against is illegal immigration, and
that’s a distinction with a very real difference.
These
people oppose illegal immigration because it is dangerous and expensive.
Believing in secure national borders, and supporting consequences for breaking
the law, is not extremism. It is the foundation of the nation-state system we
have enjoyed in the Western world since 1648.
You
could ask the parents of Kate Steinle, the 32-year-old San Francisco woman who
was fatally shot nearly two years ago on July 1, 2015. The suspect in the case
is a five-times-deported illegal alien, Juan Francisco Lopez-Sanchez. The
Steinle case became a rallying cry of President Trump’s campaign promise to
build a border wall.
Then
there’s the nonpartisan Federation for American Immigration Reform, which in a
2013 report estimated the annual costs of illegal immigration at the federal,
state and local level to be about $113 billion — nearly $29 billion at the
federal level and $84 billion at the state and local level. Is this per year?
The
Winston-Salem petition is all about fiscal concerns. If sanctuary status
results in the Trump Justice Department defunding the city, then legal
residents — including legal immigrants — will suffer.
The
various petitioners and their signatories aren’t suggesting that Immigration
and Customs Enforcement officials come to town and raid a community. What they
want is, when local law enforcement officials detain an illegal immigrant who
has committed an additional crime (beyond being in the country illegally), that
they alert federal immigration authorities.
The
bottom line is simply this: It shouldn’t be controversial to expect one’s
locality to follow federal law.
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