The Maui News

Opposition to illegal immigrant sanctuary spreading in California

- By AMY TAXIN The Associated Press

SANTA ANA, Calif. — More local government­s in California are resisting the state’s efforts to resist the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n crackdown, and political experts see politics at play as Republican­s try to fire up voters in a state where the GOP has grown weak.

Since the Jeff Sessions-led Department of Justice sued California last month over its so-called “sanctuary state” law limiting police collaborat­ion with immigratio­n agents, at least a dozen local government­s have voted to either join or support the lawsuit or for resolution­s opposing the state’s position. Those include the Board of Supervisor­s in Orange County, which has more than 3 million people.

More action is coming this week, with leaders in the Orange County city of Los Alamitos scheduled to vote Monday on a proposal for a local law to exempt the community of 12,000 from the state law. On Tuesday, the San Diego County Board of Supervisor­s is meeting to consider joining the Trump administra­tion lawsuit.

Immigratio­n has been a hot topic across the country since President Donald Trump campaigned in 2016 on promises of tougher enforcemen­t and a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border. It has been a lightning rod issue in California far longer.

The state passed a measure backed by Republican Gov. Pete Wilson in the 1990s to deny public health care and education to immigrants in the country illegally. It was later overturned but left a lingering resentment among the state’s growing Hispanic population.

In recent years, California Republican­s have taken a less strident approach to immigratio­n in a state where one in four people are foreign-born. But the Trump administra­tion lawsuit has energized many in a party that has been rendered nearly irrelevant at the state level, where Democrats control every key office.

Raphael Sonenshein, executive director of the Pat Brown Institute for Public Affairs at California State University, Los Angeles, said it’s not surprising Republican­s are galvanizin­g over immigratio­n.

Under Democratic leadership, California has enacted a series of laws in recent years aimed at helping immigrants, including issuing driver’s licenses regardless of legal status and assisting with tuition at state universiti­es. After Trump was elected, lawmakers passed the measure to limit police collaborat­ion with federal immigratio­n agents.

Immigrant and civil rights advocates applauded the measure, known as SB54, as a way to encourage immigrants to report crime to police without fearing deportatio­n. Critics said it would make it too hard for federal agents to find and deport ex-convicts who are a danger to communitie­s.

Most of the local government­s siding with the Trump administra­tion are in Orange County, an area once considered a GOP stronghold but that voted for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidenti­al election. But it’s starting to spread.

Escondido in neighborin­g San Diego County has voted to support the federal lawsuit and last week the small city of Ripon in the state’s Central Valley did the same.

In many cases, meetings on the issue have drawn boisterous crowds. Anti-illegal immigratio­n activists have traveled from city to city to attend, heightenin­g tensions with those who want their communitie­s to support immigrantf­riendly policies or stay out of the fray.

In response to the controvers­y, some local government­s have taken the opposite approach. Leaders in Santa Ana, an Orange County city home to about 330,000 residents, voted to support California in the lawsuit.

Some of the supervisor­s pushing the issue in Orange and San Diego counties are Republican­s running for Congress and they may see this as a way to generate needed enthusiasm, said Louis DeSipio, a political science professor at the University of California, Irvine.

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