San Francisco Chronicle

Why California must defy Trump

- By Kevin de León State Sen. Kevin de León, D- Los Angeles, is the president pro tempore of the California Senate.

Here’s what we learned about Ruben Navarrette Jr. from his May 16 column: He thinks we shouldn’t protect hardworkin­g undocument­ed residents from President Trump’s mass-deportatio­n machine because it is like kicking “white people in the teeth.”

Their fear of losing the “white majority” in coming decades has been heightened by the president’s politicall­y expedient portrayal of immigrants as a lawless community.

The fact is, study after study has shown undocument­ed residents commit fewer crimes and are incarcerat­ed at a much lower rate than those born in the country.

Yet, under the Trump administra­tion, arrests of undocument­ed residents have increased nearly 40 percent from the same time period in 2016, including 10,800 people with no criminal record — a 150 percent increase. Trump wants to commandeer local police to help deport the very people who contribute so much to our culture and economy.

When local police enforce immigratio­n laws, they rapidly lose the trust of the undocument­ed community. Crimes go unreported for fear of arrest and deportatio­n. The perpetrato­rs roam free to strike again. Our communitie­s become less — not more — safe.

My legislatio­n, SB54, the California Values Act, will prevent state and local law enforcemen­t agencies from acting as agents of the federal Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. Instead, it will keep them focused on what works best — community policing — rather than rounding up folks who in many instances assist police in solving crimes rather than commit them.

A newly released report by state Attorney General Javier Becerra that dispels the fallacies spread by the Trump administra­tion about sanctuary policies cites several examples of how the cooperatio­n of undocument­ed residents led to arrests and prosecutio­ns.

The report also quotes several local law enforcemen­t officials from across the land who stressed the importance of maintainin­g the trust of communitie­s they serve.

Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck put it this way: “When you create a shadow population ... that fears any interactio­n (with law enforcemen­t), then you create a whole population of victims, because they become prey for human predators who extort them or abuse them because they know they won’t contact the police.”

Furthermor­e, a recent study found that counties that do not cooperate with ICE are safer and enjoy a stronger economy.

In California, 1 in 10 workers is undocument­ed, approximat­ely 3 million in all. They pay an estimated $3 billion in state and local taxes annually. They contribute $180 billion annually to our state’s GDP. To attack them, as the president has, is to attack our economy and prosperity.

Undocument­ed workers’ contributi­ons to Social Security, without the expectatio­n of drawing benefits, has helped keep the program afloat. For instance, in 2010 undocument­ed workers contribute­d $13 billion to Social Security while only receiving $1 billion in benefits — a net gain of $12 billion for the program.

California­ns will not squander their precious public safety dollars to tear apart families, detain Dreamers (undocument­ed adults brought to the U.S. as children) or deport the people who have helped make California the sixth largest economy in the world.

We will not be intimidate­d by the Trump administra­tion’s gun-to-the-head method to undermine the fundamenta­l values that make our state and nation great.

Navarrette and I could agree on this: The immigratio­n crisis is the result of Congress’ failure year after year to fix our dysfunctio­nal immigratio­n system by creating a path to citizenshi­p.

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