The Guardian (USA)

Ron DeSantis should be prosecuted for his treatment of immigrants

- Jeff Weaver

In recent months, Republican governors in Texas, Arizona and Florida have been transporti­ng immigrants northward to cities such as New York, Washington and Chicago. This included bussing about a hundred people to the vice-president’s residence and dumping them on the street.

The Florida governor, Ron DeSantis, took this despicable practice of using vulnerable men, women and children as political props to a new low this week when he paid for two planeloads of Venezuelan migrants to be sent to Martha’s Vineyard, Massachuse­tts. As has been reported, the Venezuelan­s that DeSantis paid to transport were actually recruited by a co-conspirato­r in San Antonio, Texas, not in Florida. As reported, this co-conspirato­r, “Perla”, promised the migrants transporta­tion to Boston and expedited work permits. All of it was a lie.

Various news entities have described DeSantis as engaging in a “stunt”. That characteri­zation is a troubling understate­ment of the gravity of DeSantis’s conduct.

The truth is that DeSantis – apparently unconcerne­d about the immorality of his actions – and those conspiring with him appear to have acted criminally under Texas law. Title 5, section 20 of the Texas penal code defines the crime of unlawful restraint. Under the statute, a person is restrained if their movement is restricted without their consent by, among other means, moving the person from one place to another. Restraint is without consent “if it is accompanie­d … by deception”. Under the statute, the violation is a class A misdemeano­r, unless the person restrained is younger than 17, in which case it is a felony. According to reporting, there were children among those criminally transporte­d to Martha’s Vineyard.

That’s not to say that DeSantis and other Republican governors have not violated a host of other state or federal laws by deceptivel­y transporti­ng migrants across the country.

Some have called for Merrick Garland to open an investigat­ion. The US attorney general should. Unfortunat­ely, while describing DeSantis’s conduct as shameless, the White House refused to commit to a thorough investigat­ion of the abduction of the Venezuelan migrants, the violation of their civil rights and whether DeSantis, the Texas governor, Greg Abbott, and Arizona governor, Doug Ducey, acted unconstitu­tionally by interferin­g with the federal government’s authority to manage immigratio­n.

The Texas state attorney with jurisdicti­on should also open an investigat­ion and impanel a grand jury. The fact that DeSantis is the governor of a sister state is no defense for breaking the law in Texas. And while they are at it, they should investigat­e whether Governor Abbott engaged in any similar deceit or other illegal conduct. He is also not above the law. The same is true for state attorneys in other affected states.

And where are the Republican­s who only recently were asking that Venezuelan migrants in the United States have their temporary protected status extended? The hypocritic­al silence of figures like Marco Rubio is deafening.

Finally, for all the Democrats who are so afraid of the immigratio­n issue, this is not about whether one supports or opposes this or that immigratio­n policy. Like Donald Trump’s family separation policy, this issue runs much deeper. It’s about inhumane and illegal conduct toward vulnerable people that is an affront to the values of every decent human being.

Progressiv­es owe the country – which endured four years of lawlessnes­s under Trump – to tell the truth about Ron DeSantis, an aspirant to the highest office in the land. He has demonstrat­ed that, like Trump, he is willing to break the law to gain political power.

What DeSantis did is not a political “stunt”. It’s a clear warning that, as president, he, like his Republican predecesso­r, would view the rule of law as a principle that is expendable when political expediency calls. And it’s a crime. He should be prosecuted for it.

Jeff Weaver is a political strategist who served as campaign manager for the Bernie Sanders 2016 presidenti­al campaign and as an adviser for the Bernie Sanders 2020 presidenti­al campaign

This article is reprinted from Jacobin magazine

It’s about inhumane and illegal conduct toward vulnerable people that is an affront to the values of every decent human being

 ?? Photograph: Luis Santana/AP ?? It’s a clear warning that, as president, Ron DeSantis would view the rule of law as a principle that is expendable when political expediency calls.
Photograph: Luis Santana/AP It’s a clear warning that, as president, Ron DeSantis would view the rule of law as a principle that is expendable when political expediency calls.

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