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  1. #1
    Senior Member ShockedinCalifornia's Avatar
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    Arizona was once tolerant of IA's. What happened?

    NEWS ANALYSIS

    Arizona was once tolerant of illegal immigrants. What happened?

    Analysts suggest it was a perfect storm of demographic shifts, a scary criminal element, the recession and a new governor.

    By Anna Gorman and Nicholas Riccardi, Los Angeles Times

    August 1, 2010|7:45 p.m.

    Reporting from Phoenix β€” Arizona has made a name for itself as the state with the harshest policies against illegal immigration. But as few as six years ago, this border state was among the nation's most welcoming of illegal immigrants.

    Back then, its two Republican U.S. senators and one of its congressmen were among the strongest advocates of legalizing millions of illegal residents in the country. Mexico was the state's largest trading partner, and the governor boasted of her warm relationships with counterparts across the border. Both political parties courted the Latino vote.

    Now the state government is fighting an order by a federal judge who last week stayed key parts of a law, SB 1070, designed to drive illegal immigrants from Arizona.

    How did things change so quickly?

    "The perfect storm occurred," said Mesa Mayor Scott Smith. "There was a combination of demographic changes, the introduction of a criminal element that didn't used to be here and the drop in the economy, which has put everyone on edge."

    Now just about every prominent Republican here, including Sens. Jon Kyl and John McCain, backs SB 1070 and opposes legalization for illegal immigrants. Mexican governors refuse to set foot on Arizona soil. SB 1070 author Russell Pearce, a lawmaker formerly dismissed by many as an extremist, is poised to become president of the state Senate.

    "The anger is palpable and measurable by candidates for office," said Stan Barnes, a former Republican state senator and veteran lobbyist. "Anyone who wants to hold elected office here will first be questioned on it."

    The state captured the national spotlight in April, when Gov. Jan Brewer, a Republican, signed the law, which requires police to determine the status of anyone they lawfully stop and also suspect is an illegal immigrant. It also made it a state crime to lack immigration papers.

    Brewer said it was necessary to protect residents against drug cartels that smuggle immigrants across Arizona's southern border. Civil rights groups alleged the law would lead to wide-scale racial profiling.

    SB 1070 polls well in Arizona, winning approval ratings between 55% and 70%. It has garnered majority support in national polls too, and legislators in more than 20 states have vowed to introduce versions.

    But SB 1070 wasn't Arizona's first legislative assault on illegal immigration. Since 2004, Arizona legislators have passed measures that restricted illegal immigrants from receiving in-state tuition, made English the official language and dissolved any business that repeatedly hired illegal immigrants.

    At the same time, the Republican Party in Arizona has moved to the right on all sorts of issues. Susan Gerard, a former GOP state senator who also worked for former Democratic Gov. Janet Napolitano, was one of more than a dozen Republican moderates in the Legislature at the start of the decade. Now, she said, there are none.

    "The Republican Party in Arizona, and really throughout the country, has taken giant leaps to the right," Gerard said.

    About 8% of Arizona's population is made up of illegal immigrants, nearly all from Mexico, according to the Pew Hispanic Center. (Thirty percent of state residents are Latino.) Though the growth of that population has slowed somewhat in the last few years, the center estimates that about 500,000 illegal immigrants live in the state, up from about 90,000 in 1990.

    The population increased after the federal government stepped up enforcement along the California border, slowing illegal crossings with more agents and a massive fence. That pushed traffic east β€” to the mountains and deserts of Arizona.

    The boom in construction in Arizona also brought illegal immigrants, changing the makeup of cities and creating unease among longtime residents.

    Smith, the mayor of Mesa, said the mostly conservative residents in his city started to express frustration with the number of day laborers, with the amount of Spanish being spoken and with immigrants working jobs traditionally held by high school students at fast-food restaurants and elsewhere.

    "You have whole neighborhoods that have transitioned into primarily Hispanic," Smith said. "Whether right or wrong, people saw things were changing."

    There is also widespread fear of crime coming to the state from Mexico, especially as a drug war rages to the south. Arizona has actually become safer since illegal immigrants started streaming in in the late 1990s. Phoenix is one of the safest cities in the nation, and crime has not increased along the border either.

    Still, there has been a series of unnerving incidents not reflected in the statistics β€” gun battles between drug cartels on the interstates, "drop houses" in Phoenix where traffickers hold undocumented migrants for ransom and, in March, the slaying of rancher Robert Krentz on his property in southern Arizona. Footprints from the scene led across the border to Mexico.

    The smuggling-related incidents coincided with an economic decline that fueled anger among native-born Arizonans. "Historically, illegal immigration always comes up as an issue when the economy starts to tank," said Lisa Magana, a political science professor at Arizona State University.

    But one factor influencing the state in profound ways was President Obama's decision to name Napolitano his secretary of Homeland Security.

    Barnes, the Republican lobbyist, said the popular Democratic governor had "a dampening effect on activism on illegal immigration issues." But in January 2009, Brewer, who had been secretary of state, succeeded Napolitano.

    "If Janet Napolitano were still governor, 1070 would not be law," Barnes said. "Because she's not governor and Jan Brewer is governor, 1070 is law, and now the earthquake is being felt nationwide and worldwide."

    Indeed, Pearce, who could not be reached for comment, had pushed measures similar to SB 1070 as far back as 2004. Napolitano vetoed those efforts.

    Another lawmaker's bills, designed to ban a Mexican American studies program in the Tucson school system, had also failed. But this year Brewer signed such a bill into law.

    Pearce, meanwhile, is proposing more legislation β€” to prevent the U.S.-born children of illegal immigrants from becoming citizens and checking the immigration status of parents of children in public schools.

    nicholas.riccardi@latimes.com

    anna.gorman@latimes.com

    http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld ... 7700.story

  2. #2
    Senior Member sarum's Avatar
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    OMG! So MANY LIES! Napolitano was NOT a popular governor. She is part of the political class. She did not come from here and we knew she would not stay. Her time with Janet Reno in FL was truly un-nerving to many of us.

    Stan Barnes is out of touch. This has been brewing for way longer than 6 years. Working class neighborhoods have been dealing with the threat of job loss to illegals for decades and that is why there has been so much pressure to try to find roofers, pool care, drywall contractors etc., who weren't pimps for illegal workers.

    Citizens have been ashamed for decades to have illegals working on their homes because we all personally know people who have been put out of business by the perfect storm of a government all too willing to lure business at any cost - including the cost of our social services that were paid into by us for us - not to be given to illegals so that their employers could underbid us.

    Until they acknowledge this in full you can be sure they do not have a grip on the problem and therefore will not have a grip on the solution.
    Restitution to Displaced Citizens First!

  3. #3
    Senior Member ShockedinCalifornia's Avatar
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    Sarum. Are you interested in posting your comments on the LATimes link?

  4. #4
    Senior Member miguelina's Avatar
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    We the people were not aware of all the taxpayer funded services that illegal aliens were getting FREE (to them), that's the crux of the matter. We the people were also not aware than tens of millions (mostly from mexico) were here and kept coming. NOW we know, we woke up to the fraud and deceit perpetrated by these criminals and their enablers. NO MORE!

    I'm ashamed to say I had no idea until the 2006 million illegal alien march...and I got uber PISSED!

    I was once a legal immigrant and we were eligible for ANY "freebies" so I could not believe that illegal aliens were getting everything. No wonder they come by the millions and reproduce like jackrabbits!!! It's way more profitable to come illegally than legally.

    If illegal aliens want to stay in the US so badly, let them PAY for everything they need/use. This means education, hospitals, food, housing, etc., etc., etc. Not one taxpayer funded cent should be spent on these miscreants and their spawn.

    Methinks if they had to pay for labor & delivery and received no bennies through their anchors, they'd keep it in their pants and birth rates would plunge.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)
    "

  5. #5
    Senior Member sarum's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ShockedinCalifornia
    Sarum. Are you interested in posting your comments on the LATimes link?
    Dippity Doo Dah DUN DUN DUN!
    Restitution to Displaced Citizens First!

  6. #6
    Senior Member ShockedinCalifornia's Avatar
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    See it. Nice job sarum.

  7. #7
    Senior Member Bowman's Avatar
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    All of their negative effects could not be hidden any longer by an artificial economic bubble or sympathetic Globalist media.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  8. #8
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    Well stated above Bowman.

    "If Janet Napolitano were still governor, 1070 would not be law," Barnes said. "Because she's not governor and Jan Brewer is governor, 1070 is law, and now the earthquake is being felt nationwide and worldwide."
    Thank goodness for AZ she isn't governor any longer. The legislature passed SB 1070 with strong support of the public.

    The LA Times is struggling and caters to potential subscribers, just like politicians cater to potential voters.
    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  9. #9
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    lets see.

    Phoenix became the kidnapping capitol of america, and second in the world.

    Robert Krentz was killed by an illegal alien. or a member of a drug cartel

  10. #10
    Senior Member USPatriot's Avatar
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    I am really getting tired of Rino's,the Media and left wing Dems calling everyone speaking out against Illegal Immigration as being Far Right Conservative nut case racist.

    In other words that includes 70 % to 80 % of of the USA population..

    They should get a clue . Who is a racist nut case is in the eye of the beholder. We Win, They Loose.
    "A Government big enough to give you everything you want,is strong enough to take everything you have"* Thomas Jefferson

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