The Arizona Republic

Texas governor signs ‘sanctuary cities’ ban

- PAUL J. WEBER

AUSTIN, Texas - Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Sunday night signed what he calls a ban on so-called “sanctuary cities” that allows police to ask about a person’s immigratio­n status and threatens sheriffs with jail if they don’t cooperate with federal authoritie­s. He did so over intense opposition from immigrant-rights groups and Democrats, who say the law echoes Arizona’s immigratio­n crackdown in 2010 that prompted national controvers­y and lawsuits.

Abbott, a Republican in his first term, took the unusual step of signing the bill on Facebook with no public notice in advance. He said Texas residents expect lawmakers to “keep us safe” and said similar laws have already been tested in federal court, where opponents have said the bill likely will be immediatel­y challenged.

“Let’s face it, the reason why so many people come to America is because we are a nation of laws and Texas is doing its part to keep it that way,” Abbott said. His spokesman, John Wittman, later said they chose to sign the bill on a Facebook livestream because that’s “where most people are getting their news nowadays.”

The bill cleared a final hurdle this week in the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e over objections from Democrats and immigrant rights supporters who’ve packed the Texas Capitol. They call it a “show-me-yourpapers” measure that will be used to discrimina­te against Latinos.

Every major police chief in Texas opposed the bill. Republican­s say it is needed to ensure local jails honor requests from federal officials to keep dangerous offenders behind bars.

The term “sanctuary cities” has no legal definition, but Republican­s want local police to help federal immigratio­n agents crack down on criminal suspects in the U.S. illegally.

Republican­s have a strong majority in the Legislatur­e and shoved aside Democratic objections to push the bill, even as President Donald Trump’s efforts to withoffici­als hold federal funding for sanctuary cities have hit roadblocks in federal courts.

The Texas bill allows police to inquire about the immigratio­n status of anyone they detain, a situation that can range from arrest for a crime to being stopped for a traffic violation. It also requires local to comply with federal requests to hold criminal suspects for possible deportatio­n.

Opponents blast the Texas bill as a version of Arizona’s immigratio­n crackdown law, SB 1070, which launched protests, lawsuits and national controvers­y in 2010. The Arizona law went to the U.S. Supreme court, which voided much of the measure but allowed the provision permitting police to ask about immigratio­n status.

But the Texas and Arizona bills are not identical.

Whereas the Arizona law required police to try to determine the immigratio­n status of people during routine stops, the Texas bill doesn’t instruct officers to ask. But it does allow Texas police to inquire whether a person is in the country legally, even if they’re not under arrest.

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 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP FILE ?? Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signed a bill on Sunday night that allows police to ask about a person’s immigratio­n status.
EVAN VUCCI/AP FILE Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signed a bill on Sunday night that allows police to ask about a person’s immigratio­n status.

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