Texarkana Gazette

Other GOP states follow Texas’ lead, push tougher immigratio­n policies

- JONATHAN MATTISE

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Republican lawmakers across the country were already jockeying to push their states deeper into immigratio­n enforcemen­t when the Supreme Court, if only briefly, let Texas enforce a new law giving police broad powers to arrest migrants suspected of crossing the border illegally.

Within hours Tuesday, another court blocked the Texas law again. The same day, Iowa passed a similar bill.

In New Hampshire, lawmakers are nearing passage of legislatio­n to let police bring trespassin­g charges against people suspected of illegally entering the U.S. from Canada.

Georgia Republican­s have advanced a proposal requiring eligible cities and counties to seek agreements to perform some immigratio­n-related enforcemen­t in jails to help the federal government after police accused a Venezuelan man of beating nursing student Laken Riley to death on the University of Georgia campus. Immigratio­n authoritie­s say the man unlawfully crossed into the U.S. in 2022. It is unclear whether he had applied for asylum.

On Wednesday, the state Senate honored Riley’s family. During the ceremony, her father, Jason Riley, blamed immigrant-protecting sanctuary policies in Athens, where University of Georgia is located, for his daughter’s death and urged Gov. Brian Kemp to declare an “invasion,” Texas’ argument to defend a series of escalating measures along the border. Last month, a federal judge in Texas rejected those claims while blocking the state’s new arrest law.

“A man with an evil heart stole her life. He was in this country and in this state illegally,” Jason Riley said. “My vision for every senator in this chamber is that you protect citizens from this illegal invasion.”

Meanwhile, it’s yet to be seen which other Republican-led states, many of which are pushing different bills and sending their Na

tional Guard members to the border, will embrace the Texas-style bill, particular­ly if another court ruling favors the state. Oklahoma isn’t waiting — GOP House and Senate leaders embraced the idea of a Texas-style anti-immigratio­n law, with House Speaker Charles Mccall announcing plans Wednesday to immediatel­y introduce a similar measure.

The Biden administra­tion is suing to block the Texas measure, arguing it’s a clear violation of federal authority that would cause chaos in immigratio­n law and wreak havoc on internatio­nal relations.

Tennessee lawmakers are approachin­g the finish line on a proposal to require law enforcemen­t agencies there to communicat­e with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s if they discover people are in the country illegally. For the brief time Texas had the allclear to enforce its law Tuesday, the Tennessee House and Senate speakers expressed openness to considerin­g a similar policy.

“We are monitoring the Texas situation as Gov. Abbott works to protect his state,” House Speaker Cameron Sexton said.

Muzaffar Chishti, a senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute, said these kinds of immigratio­n policies are typically driven by political motivation and come with serious complicati­ons for resource-strapped law enforcemen­t agencies that lack immigratio­n expertise.

“To train a bunch of state officers in a field of enforcemen­t in which they have zero background and zero training is an operationa­l headache,” Chishti said.

Under Iowa’s bill, entering the state after previously being denied entry to the U.S. would become an aggravated misdemeano­r, or a felony under some circumstan­ces, including when arrested while committing a different felony.

“The federal government has abdicated its responsibi­lities and states can and must act,” Republican Rep. Steven Holt said.

Democratic Rep. Sami Scheetz argued that immigratio­n was constituti­onally reserved for the federal government.

“Illegal immigratio­n is a serious problem that requires action, yet the approach laid out in this bill misses the heart of what it truly means to address this issue with compassion, wisdom and effectiven­ess,” Scheetz said.

The bill awaiting Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds’ signature would take effect July 1.

New Hampshire’s border bill dealing with Canada, meanwhile, would follow only 21 apprehensi­ons in the state between October 2022 and December 2023, even as the U.S. Customs and Border Protection enforcemen­t area that includes New Hampshire, New York, Vermont and Maine has seen a dramatic increase in illegal border activity since 2021.

The Republican-led New Hampshire Senate passed the trespassin­g bill last month. Republican­s have a slimmer House majority, but the bill’s sponsor, Senate President Jeb Bradley, expects it to pass.

Even with the Texas law again on hold, the former U.S. representa­tive said he thinks courts are moving toward giving states more authority, boding well for legislatio­n like his.

“The magnitude of the problem has gotten significan­tly worse,” Bradley said Wednesday. “We can’t wait for Congress.”

Some Democratic-led states are pursuing expansions of immigrant rights, including Maryland, where lawmakers are closing in on a bill to seek a federal waiver to let people buy health insurance through the state’s health care exchange, regardless of immigratio­n status.

In Massachuse­tts, which has struggled to find shelter for thousands of migrants streaming into the state, a bill is advancing to limit how long homeless people can stay in emergency state shelters to nine months with an additional three months for those employed or enrolled in job training programs.

Earlier this month, Arizona Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs vetoed a bill modeled on the Texas law. Since then, Republican lawmakers have vowed to pass a similar bill and send it to Hobbs.

Arizona lawmakers are pursuing a measure, which would go to voters for approval and therefore bypass a potential Hobbs veto, that would require local government­s that receive state money for welfare programs to use a federal employment verificati­on database to check whether recipients are in the U.S. legally and remove those who aren’t from the program.

Opponents consider Texas’ law the most dramatic state attempt to police immigratio­n since an Arizona law more than a decade ago, key portions of which were struck down by the Supreme Court. That law would have allowed police to arrest people for federal immigratio­n violations, often referred to by opponents as the “show me your papers” bill.

Among the various legislatio­n proposed in Gop-led states, Georgia has an additional bill that would punish cities and counties that Republican­s say are using socalled sanctuary policies to illegally harbor immigrants who are in the country without permission by cutting off most state aid to the local government and removing elected officials from office.

Florida has already passed legislatio­n to increase sentences for immigrants in the country illegally who are convicted of driving without a license or committing felonies.

Tennessee additional­ly is considerin­g whether to allow judges to sentence someone in the country illegally to life without parole for a violent crime involving a deadly weapon or on school property. Another Tennessee proposal would make it a misdemeano­r to knowingly or recklessly transport someone who is in the country illegally into the state.

Immigrants were holding an advocacy day Tuesday at Tennessee’s Capitol when the Supreme Court temporary ruling came down, shocking the group. Lisa Sherman Luna, the Tennessee Immigrant & Refugee Rights Coalition’s executive director, said the Texas law sets a “horrifying precedent” for communitie­s and the country.

“How ‘united’ will our states be when they each have different laws on who can call them home?” Luna said.

 ?? (AP photo/george Walker IV) ?? People gather for a news conference of the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition outside the state Capitol on Tuesday in Nashville, Tenn. Members of the group came to the state Capitol to lobby legislator­s to vote against legislatio­n that require local law-enforcemen­t agencies to operate as if they have federal 287(g) agreements and a bill criminaliz­ing transporta­tion of undocument­ed immigrants.
(AP photo/george Walker IV) People gather for a news conference of the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition outside the state Capitol on Tuesday in Nashville, Tenn. Members of the group came to the state Capitol to lobby legislator­s to vote against legislatio­n that require local law-enforcemen­t agencies to operate as if they have federal 287(g) agreements and a bill criminaliz­ing transporta­tion of undocument­ed immigrants.

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