Porterville Recorder

Los Alamitos debates sanctuary law

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LOS ALAMITOS — The conservati­ve backlash against California’s sanctuary law has taken the form of lawsuits and public tongue-lashings.

But one tiny city in Orange County may take the step of declaring itself legally exempt.

On Monday evening, after a peaceful but noisy confrontat­ion by pro- and con demonstrat­ors, the Los Alamitos City Council began hearing hours of public comment on whether it should enact an ordinance exempting the city on grounds that the state law is unconstitu­tional. No vote had taken place by midnight.

The city of 12,000 argues that the federal government — not the state — has authority over immigratio­n.

It’s the same argument made by the Trump administra­tion, which sued California last month. On Tuesday, the Board of Supervisor­s in San Diego County — a region of more than 3 million people which has a border with Mexico — will meet to consider joining that suit.

California has portrayed itself as something of a leader in battling Trump administra­tion immigratio­n-control efforts. Leaders at the state level and in big cities have condemned mass raids and deportatio­n efforts, the president’s call for a border-spanning wall with Mexico and the attorney general’s “zero tolerance” order to prosecute people caught illegally entering the United States for the first time.

Gov. Brown elicited rare and effusive praise from Trump last week for pledging to contribute 400 troops to the National Guard’s deployment to the Mexican border. But Brown was clear that California troops will help go after drugs, guns and criminal gangs, but not immigrants.

However well that stance may play in immigrant or largely Democratic enclaves, it has set conservati­ve teeth on edge and sparked a backlash that Republican­s have been quick to join.

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.

“When the attorney general of the United States decides to take a firm position against it, I think that gave a signal to a lot of us that, ‘Hey, California is on the wrong side of this thing,”’ said Fred Whitaker, chairman of the Republican Party in Orange County. He also is a councilman in the city of Orange who proposed a local resolution on the issue that passed last week.

Some of the supervisor­s pushing the issue in Orange and San Diego counties are Republican­s running for Congress, said Louis Desipio, a political science professor at the University of California, Irvine.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY HAVEN DALEY ?? In this 2017, file photo, protesters rally outside a courthouse where a federal judge heard arguments in the first lawsuit challengin­g President Donald Trump’s executive order to withhold funding from communitie­s that limit cooperatio­n with immigratio­n...
AP PHOTO BY HAVEN DALEY In this 2017, file photo, protesters rally outside a courthouse where a federal judge heard arguments in the first lawsuit challengin­g President Donald Trump’s executive order to withhold funding from communitie­s that limit cooperatio­n with immigratio­n...

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