August 09, 2005
Despite Politicians, American Revolt Against
Immigration Gathers Force
By Bryanna Bevens
Personally, I thought the California Border Police
Initiative (ACA 20) was a remarkably simple solution to
an unruly mess.
According to California State Assemblyman Ray Haynes
(R-Temecula), ACA 20 was
"a constitutional
amendment designed to create the California Border
Police, a state agency whose sole purpose, if we can
ever get it formed, would be the comprehensive, uniform,
and statewide enforcement of federal immigration law."
(Of course, immigration enforcement is supposedly a federal matter, not the responsibility of individual state governments. In practice, however, it is the states, not the feds, who shoulder the bulk of the burden.)
But apparently not everyone agreed with me about ACA 20. It has been crushed in California’s Judiciary Committee by a 6 to 3 vote.
The NOES were
Chairman, Assemblyman
Dave Jones (D-Sacramento) [
Email]
Assemblywoman Noreen Evans (D-Santa Rosa) [ Email]
Assemblyman John Laird (D-Santa Cruz) [ Email]
Assemblyman Lloyd Levine (D-Van Nuys) [ Email]
Assemblywoman Sally Lieber (D-Mountain View) [ Email]
Assemblywoman Cindy Montanez (D-San Fernando) [ Email]
Another recent legislative casualty in the same session of the Judiciary Committee: ACA 6, offered by Assemblyman Mark Wyland (R-Vista). According to the legislative digest: "This measure would prohibit the state from issuing
any driver's license,
state identification card, providing
in-state tuition or fees for postsecondary education, granting any voting privileges, or providing any health, social, or other state or local public benefit to any person who is neither a citizen of the United States nor an alien lawfully present in the United States…" And ACA 20 would also have required proof of citizenship to vote—oh, the gall.
This attempt by Mr. Wyland to restrict government
benefits for illegal immigrants is the latest of
many—and certainly not the last we will see in the
California legislature.
But Assemblyman Haynes is taking the border enforcement
issue straight to the voters. The California Border
Police Initiative has just started
circulating petitions to put the measure on the
state ballot. They need 600,000 signatures by December
12. I think they can do it
While the Haynes measure creates a new state police
force, there is also a bill in the U.S. Congress that
seeks to establish a federal civilian police force…or
militia.
Just before the recess bell, Congressman John Culberson
(R-TX) introduced H.R. 3622: The Border Protection Corps
Act.
If enacted, state Governors would have the authority to
"deputize" citizens to aid law enforcement in the
apprehension of illegal immigrants.
The citizen groups would be known as the Border
Protection Corps and operate under the control of the
Governor. According to
H.R. 3622, the Corps could
"…use any means and
any force authorized by State law to prevent individuals
from unlawfully entering the United States"
Additionally, the Governors would be "authorized
to call
United States citizens into
service in the militia."
According to Representative Culbertson, the cost
will be easily covered by Homeland Security "first-responder"
funds that (for some reason) "have been sitting
unspent and untouched in the U. S. Treasury for over two
years."
The idea of creating
civilian militia groups might sound surprising. But
in fact, they are a fundamental American freedom.
According to the United States Constitution [Article
1, s. 8, 14.]:
"Congress shall have
power to provide for calling forth the militia to
execute the laws of the Union, suppress insurrections,
and repel
invasions."
To date, there are 48 co-sponsors of the legislation.
While researching this bill, I read many comments by
pro-immigrant and Hispanic rights groups denouncing the
Border Corps legislation.
But I thought this
comment from
Roger Rocha,
Texas state director [send him
mail] of the
League of United Latin American Citizens [LULAC] was
most telling.
After he expressed
disapproval of
civilian militias, he wanted to
warn lawmakers that supporting this measure
"could critically jeopardize the Hispanic vote." [Border
Militia Proposal Gets Cool Reception, By Alicia
A. Caldwell, Associated Press, July 29, 2005]
Oh, boo-hoo…I’ll start looking into grief therapy now.
But I suppose Rocha’s threat is well-timed. The pending
2006 elections bring an assortment of dog and pony shows
that cater to the dream of seizing the hefty but
untapped (and mythical, read
Steve Sailer)
Hispanic vote.
But to throw a trump card threat so early in the
game: I think I hear a trace of panic in Mr. Rocha’s
comments.
Whether by
ballot measure or civilian patrol, the popular
movement against illegal immigration is starting to
circumvent the sluggish legislative process that has
failed to respond to immigrant invasion.
Nationwide, this growing
grass roots rebellion will render useless the
politicians on whom special interest groups have come to
rely.
Threatening to withhold the Hispanic vote means nothing
to
citizen volunteers who are motivated by
patriotism—not by the prospect of elected office and
getting their snouts into the tax trough.
And LULAC et al. know it.
Bryanna Bevens [email
her] is a political consultant and former chief of staff
for a member of the California State Assembly.