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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Mississippi Lawmakers Pass Anti-Illegal Immigration Law

    Mississippi Lawmakers Pass Anti-Illegal Immigration Law


    Published March 15, 2012
    Fox News Latino

    Jackson, Miss. – Joining a nationwide trend, Mississippi House members voted for a bill Thursday that seeks to crack down on undocumented immigrants.

    The bill, which passed with a 70-47 vote, calls for police to check the immigration status of people they arrest.

    Leaders stripped more controversial provisions before the vote on House Bill 488. Next, the Republican-controlled state Senate is expected to pass it, and the governor has expressed support for the measure.

    After initially failing, opponents of the bill were able on a second attempt to strip a provision requiring schools to count undocumented immigrants, saying it would violate federal law.

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    House Judiciary B Committee Chairman Andy Gipson, a Braxton Republican, denied opponents' claims that the measure was racist or immoral, saying it was about enforcing the law. Gipson said he tried to craft a bill that would survive court challenges and allow charity toward migrants.

    "It's about the rule of law," he told House members. "We want to say you're welcome here, we just want you to follow the proper procedures, the proper protocols."

    Opponents warned families would be shattered by deportations and that the bill would reinforce outsiders' stereotypes of Mississippi.

    "If we pass this bill, it will set Mississippi back 60 years," said Rep. Sonya Williams-Barnes, D-Gulfport. "Let us show America we are not the narrow-minded people they say we are."

    No Republicans opposed the bill, while 10 mostly white and rural Democrats voted for it. They crossed party lines despite an appeal from House Agriculture Chairman Preston Sullivan, D-Okolona, a rural white Democrat who warned the bill would hurt farmers.

    A provision that allowed law enforcement officers to ask about a person's immigration status in a traffic stop was removed. That means someone would have to be arrested for another offense before inquiries could be made.

    "If they're stopped, that in itself will not trigger this bill," Gipson said. "It would require an arrest to be made. If they are found to be unlawful, then they would be deported."

    Among earlier changes was the removal of a clause that said people could be arrested for not carrying identification, a clause that had led opponents to nickname the measure the "papers, please" bill. That portion, like several others removed in committee last month, have been blocked by courts in Arizona, Alabama and elsewhere.

    During the debate that ran from late Wednesday into Thursday, Gipson also removed a provision that could have allowed municipal utilities to refuse power, water, sewer and other services to undocumented immigrants. Such a provision was also recently blocked by a federal court in Alabama.

    Gipson said he was balancing the need to write a law that will survive court scrutiny versus the desire to remove undocumented immigrants.

    "I have tried to bring the best possible product to the body for a vote," he said.

    The changes did little to mollify critics, who continued to question whether the bill was needed. Opponents emphasize that Mississippi doesn't need to summon any ghosts of its racist past.

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    Opponents in the House debate zeroed in on the possibility that parents could be arrested, leaving behind children who are U.S. citizens. Those who have fought the Alabama and Arizona measures have highlighted such problems.

    "Your bill has nothing in it to show any kind of compassion or any kind of consideration for the children who are left behind," said Rep. Kelvin Buck, D-Holly Springs.

    Gipson admitted that "some separations" were a possibility.

    Mississippi has a relatively small undocumented population, although it appears to have grown in recent years. The Pew Hispanic Center estimated that in 2010, the state had about 45,000 undocumented immigrants out of nearly 3 million total residents.

    The bill is supported by Gov. Phil Bryant, a Republican who has been campaigning against illegal immigration since his days as state auditor.

    Proponents say the state spends more money providing services to immigrants than it reaps in taxes, and claim that undocumented immigrants, if they leave, will vacate jobs that unemployed citizens can take. They say the bill is about legal compliance and that they welcome legal immigrants.

    Gipson denied any racist intent, saying he had helped start a Hispanic ministry at a church nearly 20 years ago.

    "I have been accused of being a racist," he said. "I reject that."

    Gipson earlier added an amendment that allows any church or religious organization to minister to "immediate basic and human needs."

    He told a questioner Wednesday that a soup kitchen could feed an undocumented immigrant every day and not run afoul of the proposed bill. But Gipson said that, "if the question is `Can they harbor these people?' the answer is `No."'

    The bill now goes to the Senate, which has not advanced its own immigration bill.

    Mississippi Lawmakers Pass Anti-Illegal Immigration Law | Fox News Latino
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    Miss. House begins debate on immigration bill


    The House -- continuing to work past midnight as they rushed to meet today's deadline to pass legislation out of their chamber -- debated the controversial proposal for more than two hours.

    "This bill is not profiling, starving... any person," said Judiciary B Chair Andy Gipson, R-Braxton. "It is about the rule of law...It is against the law to be here illegally in Mississippi."

    Rep Ed Blackmon, D-Canton, said, "This bill will displace families...I wonder if this bill lacks the full measure of Christian compassion most of us espouse to."

    Gipson offered and passed amendments on the floor that he said were designed to take out any constitutional challenges of the bill. He said various federal courts have blocked portions of similar laws passed by other states. He said those portions, such as requiring "papers" of a person believed to be in the country illegally, had been removed from the proposal considered by the Mississippi House.

    He called it "the most compassionate" of the various anti illegal immigration proposals considered across the country.
    Last edited by HAPPY2BME; 03-15-2012 at 08:10 PM.
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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    182 deported from MS. by Secure Communities

    @ http://www.alipac.us/f12/124-921-dep...2012-a-251702/
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    Senior Member Kiara's Avatar
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    "Your bill has nothing in it to show any kind of compassion or any kind of consideration for the children who are left behind," said Rep. Kelvin Buck, D-Holly Springs.

    What kind of compassion or consideration did the parents have when they decided to break the law and risk the family being seperated?

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    Senior Member dogpile's Avatar
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    Who is blamed when children are "left behind" by criminals who are sent to jail? THE CRIMINALS! So why are WE to blame for the children of criminal invaders?

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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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