Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Just a few demands

- THE ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

Kris Kobach isn’t asking much to grant America his services as President Donald Trump’s new immigratio­n czar. Just 24/7 use of a government jet. And a West Wing office with “walk-in” privileges to the Oval Office. And a future appointmen­t to head Homeland Security. Oh, and authority over top Cabinet officials, including the attorney general and the secretary of defense.

For these and some other modest demands, America would get an immigratio­n czar who’s spent his whole career proving how disastrous such an appointmen­t would be. What a bargain!

Kobach’s entire elective résumé consists of two terms as Kansas’ secretary of state and the loss of a gubernator­ial race. Yet he’s shown a Forrest Gumplike ability to insert himself into some of America’s biggest controvers­ies—if Gump had been a self-promoting purveyor of noxious xenophobia.

In 2017, Kobach signed on to cochair a commission investigat­ing Trump’s unfounded claim that illegal voting by non-citizens cost him the 2016 popular vote. There was never a bit of truth to Trump’s vote-fraud assertion, but that didn’t stop Kobach from making a three-ring show out of the

commission before it was unceremoni­ously shuttered.

Remember the notorious “papers, please” law allowing former Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio to essentiall­y stop anyone with brown skin and demand they prove their citizenshi­p? Kobach, freelancin­g outside his own state, was its chief architect. He co-authored a similar measure in Alabama and offered legal counsel to defend anti-immigrant laws in Pennsylvan­ia and Texas.

Now Trump wants an “immigratio­n czar” to coordinate immigratio­n policy across federal agencies. Given Trump’s open hostility toward immigrants almost regardless of legal status, Kobach perhaps believes he has an in.

Among Kobach’s demands is that the president “sits down individual­ly with Czar and the secretarie­s of Homeland Security, Defense, Justice, Ag, Interior, and Commerce, and tells each of the Secretarie­s to follow the directives of the Czar without delay, subject to appeal to the President in cases of disagreeme­nt.”

Giving Cabinet-dominating authority to a non-Senate-confirmed position would be constituti­onally questionab­le.

Trump might want to consider this: Any self-proclaimed dealmaker who linked up with a grifter like Kris Kobach would be certifiabl­e—as a chump.

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