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  1. #1
    Senior Member vegasvic's Avatar
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    NV SENATE HOPEFUL STARTS PETITION FOR AZ STYLE IMMIGR. LAW!!

    Senate Hopeful Starts Petition for Ariz.-Style Immigration Law

    LAS VEGAS --" Senate hopeful Chad Christensen wants to do two things: bring Arizona's controversial immigration law to Nevada and require everyone to have a photo ID when they vote.

    The assemblyman says this would cut down on widespread voter fraud that local election officials say doesn't even exist.

    Christensen was the first to sign the ballot initiative.

    "12.2-percent of all the workers in the state of Nevada are illegal immigrants. Those numbers come from the Pew Hispanic Center," he said.

    The bill would make it illegal to drive by a store and pick up day laborers. Right now, illegal immigrants are deported after immigration officers pick them out in jail. The attorney who wrote the bill says loitering or being pulled over for an illegal lane change could be seen as probable cause for deportation.

    "Perhaps lawful stop, finds there are no drugs there, but given the nervousness, given a vehicle that seems suspicious, given identification that seems suspicious, insurance that didn't match," said attorney Michael Erickson.

    Southern Nevada Hispanic groups and labor unions have spoken out against Christensen's initiatives, claiming they would inevitably lead to racial profiling.

    Christensen's petition also calls for all voters to present photo ID at the polls, claiming illegal immigrants cause widespread voting fraud.

    "It's rampant. Yes it is. Part of the reason why I believe voter numbers are down is because people start to lose faith in the system," he said.

    But there is no problem with voting fraud according to Clark County Registrar of Voters Larry Lomax.

    Governor Jim Gibbons rejected Christensen's earlier call for a special legislative session on the immigration issue, stating that it's the federal government's responsibility."

    FROM: http://www.8newsnow.com/Global/story.asp?S=12563240

    Christensen's info
    http://www.ktnv.com/Global/link.asp?L=443583
    By damaging us, you damage yourselves!

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  2. #2
    Senior Member vegasvic's Avatar
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    another source:

    http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2010/ma ... in-nevada/

    Associated Press
    "
    A conservative assemblyman and long-shot U.S. Senate hopeful filed an initiative petition Friday that would establish in Nevada tough new immigration laws similar to Arizona's and require photo identification to vote.

    Republican Chad Christensen, who has supported restricting services to undocumented immigrants in past legislative sessions, said Nevada is "on the edge."

    He estimated illegal immigrants cost the state more than $700 million a year in education, health care and incarceration expenses.

    "As a state, we are on the edge, and these costs are increasing," he said during a news conference in Las Vegas, where the petition was filed with the secretary of state's office.

    He's one of 12 Republicans seeking the U.S. Senate nomination in the June 8 primary, though he trails the front runners by a big margin. The winner will take on Harry Reid, the Democratic majority leader who is seeking a fifth term in November.

    Petition backers must collect 97,002 valid signatures by Nov. 9 to send the initiative to the 2011 Legislature. If lawmakers reject it or fail to act, it would be put to voters in 2012.

    The Arizona law that has spurred protests and boycotts around the nation requires that police conducting traffic stops or questioning people about possible legal violations ask them about their immigration status if there is "reasonable suspicion" that they're in the country illegally.

    The law also makes it a state crime to be in the country illegally or to impede traffic while hiring day laborers, regardless of the worker's immigration status. It would become a crime for illegal immigrants to solicit work.

    Changes were added to strengthen restrictions against using race or ethnicity as the basis for immigration questioning by police.

    Some officials in Phoenix have estimated the city could lose $90 million in hotel and convention center business over the next five years because of backlash to the law.

    Christensen said his initiative is not about race or politics. "This is an issue between Americans and non-Americans," he said.

    Support for the Arizona law by Nevada Republican gubernatorial candidate Brian Sandoval cost him an endorsement by the influential group Hispanics in Politics. Group president Fernando Romero called the law racist.

    Besides toughening immigration enforcement, the Nevada initiative would also require photo identification to vote, something that has been rejected by state lawmakers in the past.

    Ron Futrell, Christensen's campaign communication director, said the Nevada proposal mirrors Indiana's voter ID law that was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2008.

    "If there's no identification check along the way, you don't know if there's a problem or not" with voter fraud, Futrell said.

    He called the proposal a "pre-emptive" move "to make sure people are here legally and have authorized ID in order to vote." "
    By damaging us, you damage yourselves!

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