Author Topic: Justices accept Arizona's appeal over controversial immigration law  (Read 371 times)

Dos Equis

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Will be interesting to see how they rule.  Could be another Obama position/policy going down in flames before the election. 

Justices accept Arizona's appeal over controversial immigration law
By Bill Mears, CNN Supreme Court Producer
updated 12:04 PM EST, Mon December 12, 2011

Washington (CNN) -- The Supreme Court has agreed to decide whether Arizona can enforce its controversial immigration law, over the strong objections of the Obama administration.

The justices made the announcement in a brief order Monday.

Federal courts had blocked key parts of the state's Support Our Law Enforcement and Safe Neighborhoods Act, known as SB 1070. Arizona had argued illegal immigration was creating financial hardships and safety concerns for its residents and that the federal government has long failed to control the problem.

The administration has countered immigration issues are under its exclusive authority and that state "interference" would only make matters worse.

Arguments could be held in April with a final ruling by June. Justice Elena Kagan will not hear the case, since she had been involved in the administration's initial legal opposition to the law as solicitor general, before taking the bench last year.



2010: Feds vs. state over immigration

2010: AZ governor signs immigration bill

2010: What the AZ immigration law says The possibility of a 4-4 split would prevent the four provisions of the law from going into effect, but not settle the larger constitutional questions.

Among the provisions blocked would be the requirement that local police officers check a person's immigration status while enforcing other laws.

The Obama administration and immigration rights groups have opposed efforts to have local law enforcement apprehend and help deport illegal immigrants.

Although the specific question before the high court goes to the law's enforcement, the justices could use the appeal to address the broader questions of its constitutionality. Similar laws -- raising similar constitutional questions -- are under challenge in lower courts in Georgia, Alabama, Utah, and South Carolina. Arizona's appeal was the first to reach the Supreme Court.

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer said she is confident the high court will rule for the state.

"This case is not just about Arizona. It's about every state grappling with the costs of illegal immigration. And it's about the fundamental principle of federalism, under which these states have a right to defend their people," she said in a statement after the Supreme Court agreed to decide the matter. "Arizona has been more than patient waiting for Washington to secure the border. Decades of federal inaction and misguided policy have created a dangerous and unacceptable situation and states deserve clarity from the court in terms of what role they have in fighting illegal immigration."

At issue is whether states have any authority to step in to enforce immigration matters or whether that is the exclusive role of the federal government.

Arizona argues it is merely assisting and cooperating with federal authorities, which it says Congress has blessed.

But the administration -- backed by a variety of immigrant and civil rights groups -- says allowing such state authority would hurt relations between the U.S. and other countries, disrupt existing cooperative efforts and unfairly target legal immigrants.

Earlier this year, a three-judge panel on the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals sided with the Justice Department and against Brewer.

U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton last year had temporarily blocked the law's most contested parts a day before they were scheduled to go into effect. The appeals court ruling upheld Bolton's ruling in April.

The legislation has a variety of supporters and detractors.

Republican lawmaker, Maricopa County, Arizona, Sheriff Joe Arpaio and other state governments were among those filing briefs with the appeals court supporting the law. The Mexican government, the Anti-Defamation League, the American Immigration Lawyers Association and the city of Tucson, Arizona, were among those filing briefs supporting the Justice Department's side.

In its petition to the high court, Arizona says it is the nation's busiest illegal entry point, with many people streaming in from neighboring Mexico.

"Arizona bears the brunt of the problems caused by illegal immigration. It is the gateway for nearly half of the nation's illegal border crossings," said state officials. "Beyond the obvious safety issues, the fiscal burdens imposed by the disproportionate impact of illegal immigration on Arizona are daunting. Arizona spends several hundred million dollars each year incarcerating criminal aliens and providing education and health care to aliens who entered and reside in the country in violation of federal law."

Among the provisions given the go-ahead in April was a ban on "sanctuary cities," or municipalities with laws or policies that render them relatively safe for undocumented immigrants.

Bolton's ruling also allowed a provision making it illegal to hire day laborers if doing so impedes traffic. And her order allowed parts of the law dealing with sanctions for employers who hire illegal immigrants to take effect.

The appellate court sided with the Justice Department largely on the argument that federal immigration policy -- as well as America's standing in the world -- would be greatly undermined if individual states adopted their own separate immigration laws. Doing so, the ruling contends, essentially means a given state is adopting its own foreign policy, one that may be in opposition to national policy.

"That 50 individual states or one individual state should have a foreign policy is absurdity too gross to be entertained. In matters affecting the intercourse of the federal nation with other nations, the federal nation must speak with one voice," Circuit Judge John Noonan wrote in a concurring opinion.

The Arizona appeal could set important precedent on similar laws pending across the country.

In the first half of 2011, state legislatures in all 50 states and Puerto Rico have introduced a record number of bills or resolutions relating to immigrants or refugees, according to a report by the National Conference of State Legislatures. Through June, states had introduced 1,592 such bills or resolutions, compared to 300 in 2005.

http://www.cnn.com/2011/12/12/justice/arizona-immigration-law/index.html?hpt=hp_t1

Soul Crusher

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Re: Justices accept Arizona's appeal over controversial immigration law
« Reply #1 on: December 12, 2011, 07:48:11 PM »
Obama and his disgusting supporters should rot in hell.    Especially after what we learned about fast n furious as well as his decision to cut the NG in half on the. Border.


I'm not joking, if every obamabot were run over by a greyhound bus, I would personally feed their remains to the raccoons and vultures

Skip8282

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Re: Justices accept Arizona's appeal over controversial immigration law
« Reply #2 on: December 12, 2011, 08:18:56 PM »
Even though I support AZ, I'm doubting they can win this.  The Constitution, case law, precedence, pretty much all put immigration enforcement in the hands of the Federal government.

I've been thinking a public relations battle in the press might go further.  Who knows.

Soul Crusher

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Re: Justices accept Arizona's appeal over controversial immigration law
« Reply #3 on: December 12, 2011, 08:28:23 PM »
Even though I support AZ, I'm doubting they can win this.  The Constitution, case law, precedence, pretty much all put immigration enforcement in the hands of the Federal government.

I've been thinking a public relations battle in the press might go further.  Who knows.

Imagine you are the. Gov of AZ.   You learn that Obama and holder are running guns and laundering cash for the drug cartels, murders are mounting, crime is increasing, Obama and holder tell you to F off, what do to do?   

Skip8282

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Re: Justices accept Arizona's appeal over controversial immigration law
« Reply #4 on: December 13, 2011, 03:57:50 PM »
Imagine you are the. Gov of AZ.   You learn that Obama and holder are running guns and laundering cash for the drug cartels, murders are mounting, crime is increasing, Obama and holder tell you to F off, what do to do?   


Agreed, AZ is getting totally fucked - I just don't think they can win at the SCOTUS.  Drop a few million into running ads and fight a PR campaign.  May work, may not, I dunno.  Just an idea I was tossing around.

Soul Crusher

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Re: Justices accept Arizona's appeal over controversial immigration law
« Reply #5 on: April 23, 2012, 06:56:07 PM »
Democrats plan bill to undo Arizona immigration law if it is upheld by court
The Wasington Post ^ | 23 Apr 2012 | Rosalind S. Helderman
Posted on April 23, 2012 9:33:58 PM EDT by mandaladon

Senate Democrats are making plans to force a floor vote on legislation that would invalidate Arizona’s controversial immigration statute if the Supreme Court upholds the law this summer.

Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) will announce the fallback legislation at a hearing on the Arizona law Tuesday, a day before the Supreme Court hears oral arguments in a suit to determine whether Arizona had the authority to enact the 2010 state crackdown. The legislation would have little chance of passing in a stalemated Senate or being approved by a GOP-held House, but it would allow Democrats to push their electoral advantage with Latino voters just as the presidential campaign heats up in July.

The plan is to allow Democrats a route to express displeasure with the Arizona law if the court allows it to stand, and it would force Republicans to take a clear position on the law during the height of the presidential campaign. The immigration law is deeply unpopular with Latino voters, who could be key to the outcome of the presidential and Senate races in several Western states. “If the court upholds the Arizona law, Congress can make it clear that what Arizona is doing goes beyond what the federal government and what Congress ever intended,” Schumer said in an interview.

He called the Arizona law an “assault on the domain of the federal government” that Congress will need to address if the court allows it to stand.

(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...