Arab Times

Calif Senate OKs statewide ‘immigrant sanctuary’ bill

-

SACRAMENTO, California, April 4, (AP): California lawmakers gave initial approval Monday to a measure that prevents law enforcemen­t from cooperatin­g with federal immigratio­n officials, a measure that proponents said rebukes President Donald Trump for his immigratio­n crackdown.

It makes California a statewide sanctuary for many people who are in the country illegally.

The state Senate passed the measure on a 27-12 vote, sending it to the state Assembly over the objection of opponents who said it endangers the public by shielding felons from being deported.

The bill, SB54, advanced after Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de Leon, a Democrat from Los Angeles, amended it to let state and local law enforcemen­t notify Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t federal agents before convicted serious or violent felons are released from custody.

De Leon also stripped the bill of a provision that would have required a two-thirds vote. Passing the measure with a simple majority means it wouldn’t take effect until Jan. 1, while the previous version would have taken effect immediatel­y.

“We will cooperate with our friends at the federal level with serious and violent felons. But we won’t cooperate or lift a finger or spend a single cent when we’re talking about separating children from their mothers, mothers from their children,” de Leon said. “That’s not who we are as a great state.”

Trump in January signed an order threatenin­g to withdraw federal grants from jurisdicti­ons that bar officials from communicat­ing with federal authoritie­s about someone’s immigratio­n status.

“By passing this today you’ll be kicking the president right in the groin, and I can imagine he’s going to strike back,” said Republican Sen Jeff Stone of Temecula.

The American Civil Liberties Union, the National Day Laborer Organizing Network and other supporters said the bill would give California some of the nation’s strongest anti-deportatio­n protection­s.

Lawmakers in the nation’s most populous state also advanced two other bills that attempt to impede the president’s immigratio­n policies. They sent the Assembly a bill, SB6, that would provide $12 million to pay lawyers for immigrants facing deportatio­n, and another measure, SB31, that would bar state officials from sharing data if the federal government creates a Muslim registry.

California is home to an estimated 2.3 million immigrants who do not have legal authorizat­ion. San Francisco, which is among cities with its own sanctuary law, is suing over Trump’s executive order.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait