Santa Fe New Mexican

Mexico rejects Texas immigratio­n law

- By Ishaan Tharoor

Acontrover­sial Texas state law that empowers local authoritie­s to deport migrants illegally crossing the border is being buffeted by legal whiplash. Earlier this week, the conservati­ve majority in the U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way for the law, known as S.B. 4, to be enforced. But only hours later, a federal appeals court blocked enforcemen­t of the law ahead of subsequent deliberati­ons. The proceeding­s are expected to make their way back to the Supreme Court.

The law makes it a state crime for migrants to illegally cross the border and allows Texas judges to order the deportatio­n of undocument­ed individual­s — even though such measures regarding immigratio­n are the province of federal authoritie­s. Critics in the United States and abroad have warned that it is unconstitu­tional, counterpro­ductive and creates a climate of fear in Texas where anyone potentiall­y suspected of being an undocument­ed migrant can be subject to questionin­g by local police.

The legislatio­n comes amid an intensifyi­ng presidenti­al election cycle, in which Republican­s are hoping concerns over surges in illegal crossings will play in their favor. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is a fierce critic of President Joe Biden and has repeatedly clashed with the administra­tion over the perceived crisis at the border. But beyond the legal challenges thwarting the law’s enforcemen­t, it faces a major political obstacle: cooperatio­n, or the lack thereof, from Mexico.

Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador denounced the measures as “draconian,” as well as “dehumanizi­ng” and “anti-Christian,” during a news conference Wednesday. He warned against any precedent that leads to local state entities supersedin­g federal authority on matters of immigratio­n on both sides of the border.

“It’s as if the governor of Tamaulipas applied a law against Texans who were visiting Mexico or passing through Tamaulipas,” López Obrador said, referring to the northeaste­rn Mexican state. “According to our constituti­on, anything that is related to foreign policy is not the responsibi­lity of state government­s.”

In an interview with The Washington Post, Mexico’s top diplomat concurred. “We are not going to accept any return, either of Mexicans or non-Mexicans, from local, state or county authoritie­s in Texas,” Foreign Minister Alicia Bárcena told my colleague Mary Beth Sheridan in Mexico City. She added the Texas law, when enforced, would compel Mexico to step up its security presence at U.S. border crossings into Texas, raising the prospect of standoffs between Mexican officials and Texan counterpar­ts over attempted deportatio­ns.

Abbott and his allies cast the legislatio­n as an emergency response to an “invasion” of migrants, invoking de facto wartime powers. A district court judge ruled last month that the situation at the border does not constitute an “invasion.” The number of people taken into custody by the U.S. Border Patrol has reached the highest levels in the agency’s 100-year history under Biden, averaging 2 million per year, as the Post reported.

Liberal justices on the Supreme Court were scathing about Abbott’s efforts in their dissent. “This law will disrupt sensitive foreign relations, frustrate the protection of individual­s fleeing persecutio­n, hamper active federal enforcemen­t efforts, undermine federal agencies’ ability to detect and monitor imminent security threats, and deter noncitizen­s from reporting abuse or traffickin­g,” wrote Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson.

“Could I be detained because I’m brown, speak Spanish fluently and look like someone who crossed into Texas illegally?” Jorge Dominguez, a staff attorney for Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center and a U.S. citizen, told the Post. “This law essentiall­y makes anyone like me vulnerable to any law enforcemen­t officer in the state who wants to play the game ‘Guess the Immigrant.’ ”

Asylum-seekers in limbo in the United States’ snarled immigratio­n system are worried, too. “Some people say we can be deported. Others say we’ll be arrested if we leave this shelter,” Maria Alejandra Seijas García, a 23-year-old from Venezuela who is staying at a refuge for migrants in El Paso, told the Post. “It just seems unfair to me. Shouldn’t we be protected if we are in an asylum process?”

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