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The debate over Arizona's
SB 1070
is usually framed in terms of whether or not the States
have the right to enforce US immigration policy.
But the question is really whether the federal
government has the right and responsibility to enforce
its own immigration laws—or whether it should defer to
foreign governments, including
Third World socialist
dictators.
The
Obama Administration's answer: foreign opinion comes
first. This becomes abundantly clear when you look at
the Obama administration's deference to foreign
governments revealed in its legal arguments in the
current litigation.
Needless to say, these governments have not been shy
about
meddling
in an internal U.S. matter. Thus the government of
Mexico expressed unusual interest in the debate over
federalism and the separation of powers in the United
States when
it issued an
amicus curiae brief
[PDF]
against SB 1070.
The Mexican brief opens
by quoting
Hines v.
Davidowitz
to the effect
that "The Federal Government, representing as it does the collective
interests of the [fifty]
states, is entrusted with full and exclusive
responsibility for the conduct of affairs with foreign
sovereignties."
The brief argues:
"Arizona's
unilateral action burdens Mexico enormously by forcing
its officials and citizens to respond to divergent
requirements imposed by the different divisions of the
U.S. government."
After the reciting the
usual complaints
that SB 1070 will lead to
"racial
profiling" and in turn
"Promotion of
Negative, Ill-Conceived
Stereotypes" of Mexicans, it
gets to the Mexican government's real objection: "SB
1070 Derails Efforts Towards Comprehensive Immigration
Reform."
Of
course, this is typically hypocritical. Right now, the
Mexican government purports to be in full support of
Washington's
authority to enforce
our immigration laws
(or to be more specific, not enforce them). But just a
few years ago, Mexican President Felipe Calderon
expressed opposition to any
"unilateral"
action (in
its own internal affairs!) by the U.S. federal
government.
When the Bush Administration took a few baby steps
forward towards
enforcement
in 2007, Calderon railed:
"In the name of the government of
Mexico, I again issue an energetic protest against the
unilateral measures taken by the Congress and the United
States government that exacerbate the persecution and
the vexing treatment against undocumented Mexican
workers."
[Mexican
President Assails U.S. Measures on Migrants,
By James C. McKinley Jr.,
New York Times,
September 3, 2007]
He
went on:
"I have said that Mexico does not stop
at its border, that wherever there is a Mexican, there
is Mexico. And, for this reason, the government action
on behalf of our countrymen is guided by principles, for
the defense and protection of their rights."
[Mexican
President Assails U.S. Measures on Migrants,
James C. McKinley Jr.,
New York Times,
September 3, 2007]
You can bet all your
pesos that Calderon would become much more upset at the U.S.
government if it actually enforced its laws than he now
is at Arizona.
Amicus curiae
literally means
"friend of the court." Unless the brief is filed by
the US or state government, A U.S. court has no
obligation to accept it. Given the Mexican government's
hostility to America's rule of law,
Arizona District Court Judge
Susan Bolton
should have rejected the Mexican government's brief.
But,
needless to say, she accepted it before issuing her
notorious injunction
blocking SB 1070.
Mexico's opinion clearly influenced the Obama
administration's decision to sue Arizona.
The Obama Justice Department's complaint explicitly
cited Mexico's concerns, stating that SB 1070 will
"interfere with
vital foreign policy and
national security
interests by disrupting the United States' relationship
with Mexico and other countries."
[Justice
Department sues over Arizona immigration law,
Josh Gerstein,
Politico, July 7, 2010]
Deputy Secretary of State James
Steinberg's amicus
curie against Arizona on behalf of the State
Department also cited Mexican concerns:
"S.B. 1070
thereby undermines the diverse immigration
administration and enforcement tools made available to
federal authorities, and establishes a distinct
state-specific immigration policy, driven by an
individual state's own policy choices, which risks
significant harassment of foreign nationals, is
insensitive to U.S. foreign affairs priorities, and has
the potential to harm a wide range of delicate U.S.
foreign relations interests."[U.S.
v. Arizona - Exh 1 to Motion for Preliminary Injunction
- Affidavit of James Steinberg, (PDF)]
This State Department brief cites opinion polls of
Mexicans opposing the
law—but
it does not seem to be at all concerned that polls show
that Arizonans and Americans are overwhelmingly in favor
of SB 1070.
According to State's Steinberg, SB 1070,
"necessarily
antagonizes foreign governments and their populations,
both at home and in the U.S., likely making them less
willing to negotiate, cooperate with, or support the
United States across a broad range of important foreign
policy issues."
Additionally it "has
provoked broad-based criticism and concern among U.S.
allies in the Western Hemisphere, by human rights
experts, and in numerous
intergovernmental forums.
Nor can such criticism be readily dismissed."
As to be expected,
Steinberg's brief cites the concerns of Felipe Calderon
and the United Nations. But even more outrageously, it
also lists Bolivia's
Evo Morales,
and a joint statement by Bolivia, Venezuela, and
other
South American countries, "claiming it could lead to the legitimization of racist attitudes and
the
latent risk of
violence."
Morales, it should be
remembered,
praised protestors
who threatened to burn down the US Embassy and then
kicked out the US Ambassador less than two years ago.
This is to say nothing of
Chavez
who has completely cut off ties with America, calling it
"the greatest
terrorist in world history" and predicting that
"Yankee empire
will fall. It's already falling, It will disappear from
the face of the earth." [Hugo
Chavez kicks off Russia visit with emotional speech at a
Moscow University,
Russia Today,
September 10, 2009]
Do these
leaders sound like people sound like our
"allies" who
would be willing in any circumstance to (as Steinberg
puts it)
"negotiate with
or cooperate with"
the United States?
Obviously, the United States should not go out of its
way to antagonize foreign governments. But, even more
obviously, the rantings of anti-American dictators
should not affect our immigration policy.
If the Obama
administration's attack on Arizona
tells
us anything, it is that our president is more in tune
with and concerned about Third World socialist dictators
than he is about his own constituents.
"Washington Watcher" [email
him] is an anonymous source Inside The
Beltway.