Orlando Sentinel

GOP leaders split over E-Verify system

- By Ana Ceballos

TALLAHASSE­E — Gov. Ron DeSantis wants all Florida businesses to use a system to prevent undocument­ed immigrants from getting jobs in the state, but a powerful Republican leader is pushing back against the proposal.

Senate President Bill Galvano said this week he does not support a measure that would force Florida’s private employers to use the federal government’s E-Verify system, which checks to see if new hires are authorized to work in the U.S.

“It is something that the Florida Senate — or at least this administra­tion — does not endorse,” Galvano told The News Service of Florida during an interview Thursday.

For years, attempts to impose the mandate have gone nowhere in the Republican­dominated Florida Legislatur­e. The proposals have faced fierce pushback from Florida’s agricultur­e, tourism and constructi­on industries, including major GOP donors.

But DeSantis has made the controvers­ial proposal one of his top priorities for next year’s legislativ­e session, which starts Jan. 14.

The governor is championin­g the measure at a time when President Donald Trump — a close ally of DeSantis — will be at the top of the 2020 ticket in Florida and throughout the nation.

Trump’s hard-line immigratio­n policies have been a cornerston­e of his presidenti­al campaigns in 2016 and 2020. DeSantis made immigratio­n one of his top issues as a gubernator­ial candidate last year.

Heading into the upcoming session, Galvano’s stance as the Senate president will carry significan­t weight. His opposition could hamper the governor’s quest for a statewide E-Verify policy.

But, although Galvano said he opposes an acrossthe-board E-Verify requiremen­t, he left the door open for a slimmed down immigratio­n proposal.

“Let me put it this way,” Galvano said. “I don’t support having the requiremen­t that everyone (use) E-Verify. It’s putting an additional responsibi­lity on non-government officials.”

Galvano’s comments come less than a year after the Florida Senate approved a ban on so-called sanctuary cities — another immigratio­n priority of the governor.

When the Senate cracked down on sanctuary cities, under Galvano’s leadership, the chamber reversed course on the politicall­y charged issue it had blocked for the past three years.

While opponents decried the sanctuary city ban as an anti-immigrant proposal, critics of E-Verify maintain the measure would have a negative economic impact on many of the state’s businesses.

Florida House Speaker Jose Oliva, R-Miami Lakes, declined to comment on whether he intends to support or oppose an E-Verify bill during the upcoming session.

However, state Rep. Cord Byrd said a House bill addressing E-Verify is currently in the works.

“I have been talking to members and listening to their concerns and trying to address some of those, so I don’t think the bill would look exactly like the one that was filed last session,” Byrd told the News Service on Thursday.

A House proposal floated by Rep. Thad Altman earlier this year would have required all private employers and contractor­s to enroll in the federal system. The bill was never heard by a House committee.

“I think you will see some new wrinkles and some difference­s when it comes out,” Byrd said about his bill.

E-Verify has also faced challenges in the Senate in the past.

Sen. Aaron Bean earlier this year sponsored an EVerify bill, which never received a committee vetting.

For the upcoming session, Republican Sens. Tom Lee and Joe Gruters, who also serves as chairman of the Republican Party of Florida, are championin­g a measure (SB 664) that would apply to all Florida employers and contractor­s.

Lee, R-Thonotosas­sa, told the News Service in October he is open-minded about making changes to his bill. But “it can’t be some deal we cut to a special industry because they have a special status in the Legislatur­e,” he said.

During an appearance in The Villages last month, DeSantis vowed to make EVerify a legislativ­e priority.

Accompanie­d by Gruters and Byrd at the event, DeSantis said the federal system is needed to curtail violence and crime by undocument­ed immigrants.

“The law is the law and you either comply with it or you don’t,” the governor said at the event late last month.

 ?? STEVE CANNON/AP ?? Senate President Bill Galvano, R-Bradenton, does not support a measure that would force employers to use E-Verify.
STEVE CANNON/AP Senate President Bill Galvano, R-Bradenton, does not support a measure that would force employers to use E-Verify.

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