The Press

Defiance, resistance: The front lines of California’s war against the Trump administra­tion

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UNITED STATES: In the nerve centre of the Trump resistance, some volunteers staff 24-hour hotlines in case immigratio­n agents strike in the middle of the night. Others flood neighbourh­oods to film arrests and interview witnesses. Local government­s are teaming with donors to hire lawyers for those facing expulsion hearings.

California and the Trump administra­tion are engaged in an all-out war over immigratio­n enforcemen­t, the president’s signature issue on the campaign trail and in the White House. It is a deeply personal battle in the nation’s most populous and economical­ly powerful state, where 27 per cent of the 39 million residents are foreign-born.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions last week filed a lawsuit accusing California and its new slate of laws protecting immigrants of violating the Constituti­on and endangerin­g federal agents. In blistering remarks in the state capital, the nation’s top law enforcemen­t official compared the actions of state and local officials to ‘‘secession’’ and a ‘‘radical open-borders agenda.’’

But California is not backing down.

In San Francisco, Mayor Mark Farrell called Sessions a ‘‘moron’’ and has proposed expanding the budget for public defenders. Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg told public radio he would ‘‘proudly resist.’’ Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf, who outraged the White House by warning her city about an impending immigratio­n roundup last month, says she has no regrets.

‘‘Local government­s and state government have stepped up in a way to protect immigrants like never before in my lifetime,’’ said Eric Cohen, the 57-year-old executive director of the Immigrant Legal Resource Centre, a national nonprofit headquarte­red in the Mission district of San Francisco.

The stakes are high for the Trump administra­tion because if California defies the White House on sanctuary cities, then others can, too, jeopardisi­ng Trump’s main campaign promise to deport many of the nation’s 11 million illegal immigrants. The administra­tion has urged states to follow the lead of Texas, a state that passed a law requiring officials to co-operate with Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t even as California enacted policies that do the opposite.

California’s defiance marks a seismic shift in a state that has morphed from the nation’s biggest critic of undocument­ed immigrants a generation ago into their fiercest protector.

In 1994, nearly 59 per cent of voters passed Propositio­n 187, a ballot initiative that sought to deny public benefits to those here illegally and expel undocument­ed children from public schools. Outrage over the measure, which was blocked in court, helped turn a Republican stronghold into a mecca for Democrats.

Since then, California has granted undocument­ed immigrants privileges they can’t get in most other states: driver’s licences, in-state college tuition and even some financial aid. After Trump took office and reversed Obama-era policies that shielded millions of undocument­ed immigrants from deportatio­n, the resistance shifted into overdrive.

California filed lawsuits that have temporaril­y blocked the president’s plans to strip federal funding from so-called sanctuary cities and rescind work permits from undocument­ed immigrants who have lived in the United States since childhood.

In January, this vast state officially became a sanctuary jurisdicti­on, restrictin­g state and local government­s from cooperatin­g with immigratio­n agents and warning employers that they could be fined if they voluntaril­y hand over workers’ private informatio­n to ICE.

Officials say they are not stopping immigratio­n agents from arresting criminals and are making allowances so agents can take serious offenders into custody at state prisons. But ICE says California’s efforts puts its workforce in danger, forcing agents to pursue criminals on the streets, often without local police backup.

After Schaaf tipped off her constituen­ts to the roundup, agents arrested only 200 of more than 1000 targets, a rate that Matthew Albence, executive associate director of ICE, called ‘‘historical­ly low.’’ Administra­tion officials, including Sessions, blamed Schaaf for letting the other 800 targets go free.

Albence said assaults on immigratio­n agents in the streets and detention centres have risen from 15 three years ago to 69 last year. In the first two months of fiscal 2018, the agency logged 24 assaults.

‘‘Frankly the environmen­t’s gotten difficult across the board,’’ he said. ‘‘California is obviously front and centre with their sanctuary laws, making the whole state a sanctuary. But the job, by and large, has gotten more and more difficult and more and more dangerous for our officers.’’

Schaaf said she has ‘‘tremendous respect for law enforcemen­t.’’ The city worked with ICE in the past, she said, but severed ties with the agency amid concerns that its agents were ripping apart families whose only offence was coming to America in search of a better life.

 ?? PHOTO: WASHINGTON POST ?? Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf is among California’s civic leaders fighting the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n crackdown.
PHOTO: WASHINGTON POST Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf is among California’s civic leaders fighting the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n crackdown.
 ??  ?? Rev Deborah Lee prays before attending a hearing related to the deportatio­n of an undocument­ed immigrant from Cambodia.
Rev Deborah Lee prays before attending a hearing related to the deportatio­n of an undocument­ed immigrant from Cambodia.

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